Brain Injury Specialist

Counseling services are a valuable part of restoring balance to a person's life. The foundation of counseling success is an interactive partnership between the client, the client's support group, and the counselor.

Anyone's life can become out of balance due to common events. Usually, there are several events occurring at the same time. At this point, anyone can benefit from counseling services. In counseling sessions, a client learns insight into self and coping mechanisms. Many people have coping mechanisms, but the mechanisms may be ineffective, inappropriate, or immature.

Examples of lessons to learn in counseling sessions are: behavior modification, stress management, effective coping skills, assertiveness training, conflict resolution, parenting education, anger resolution, social skills, cognitive therapy, social skills, and more.

I counsel adolescents and adults. I usually work with individuals experiencing anxiety disorders, learning and attention disorders, mood disorders, relationship disorders, brain injury impairments, and personal skill issues.

 

Counseling Traumatic Brain Injured Clients

Counseling of the traumatic brain injury (TBI) population requires that the counselor be very experienced in cognitive retraining of brain injured persons. Typically, brain functions (thinking skills) are the primary tool used in counseling for learning new techniques, for introspective reflection, and for conceptualization. However, the brain injured person usually demonstrates signature behaviors that interfere with the process of learning. The signature behaviors of TBI are: impulsivity, poor judgement, misperception of the intentions & actions of others, slow information processing, memory disturbances, and irritability. When counseled in the context of the signature behaviors, the TBI client can benefit from counseling and the entire rehabilitation process.

TBI clients also are vulnerable to psychological impairments as a result of their brain injury. Examples of these impairments are:

  1. Impaired capacity or social perceptiveness, self-centered, decreased empathy, decreased self reflection, and decreased self critique
  2. Impaired capacity for self-control, self regulation, random restlessness
  3. Stimulus bound leads to social dependency
  4. Emotional changes (personality changes), increased apathy, silliness, irritability, emotional lability, and increased/deceased sex drive
  5. Personality regression as in increased dependency, childlike behavior, decreased ability to cope
  6. Cannot profit from experience; decreased social learning
  7. Conceptual and behavioral rigidity
  8. Disruption of previously learned social behavior: context, frequency, duration, sequence
  9. Denial ­ inability to recognize and accept actual deficits; can't perceive impact of actual deficits
  10. Increased awareness of disability resulting in: (a) depression with sadness, inactivity, self-destruction, agitated behavior; (b) anger characterized by irritability & bitterness.
  11. Lowered self-esteem when recognizing they are different from before the injury
  12. Exaggeration of previous "personality traits" - usually an inappropriate version of previously acceptable or even positive traits

 

The Road to Recovery

Even though the psychological and cognitive issues of a TBI client are many and difficult, there are predictable and identifiable stages during the recovery process. These stages were developed by Karen Lloyd, PhD at the Center for Comprehensive Services, Inc., in Carbondale, Illinois. Click here for an outline of those stages.

 

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Disclaimer: The information posted on this web site is not medical advice and should not be taken as medical advice. Information posted on this web site is for information purposes only. To obtain medical advice, please consult with your physician or schedule an appointment where a complete, detailed history of your specific case may be obtained.