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Using our brains to support charity!

Many people are surprised to learn that the most common age group for sufferers of head injuries is of young men aged between 16 and 24, members were told.

They ride their motorbikes too fast, they cycle without wearing helmets, they drink and fall over, they play rugby and they fight, said Deborah Robinson, service manager for the local branch of Headway, the charity that supports brain-injured people and their families.

The organisation celebrates its thirtieth anniversary next year and for all those years they have worked to help patients restore lost functions. Injuries can be caused by accident, assault, cardiac arrest, stroke, aneurysm, brain tumour and such. Headway offers a wide range of services including rehabilitation programmes, carer support, social re-integration, community outreach and respite care.

Deborah Robinson, with the 'blancmange' brain, alongside Tracy Gardiner, left, and Christine White
Deborah Robinson, with the ‘blancmange’ brain, alongside Tracy Gardiner, left, and Christine White

“How well people recover is determined by the extent of their injury and by their attitude,” said Deborah. “Positive people do well and sometimes patients recover completely, especially if they are young.”

Her informative talk was illustrated in some novel ways. She showed members a model of a brain, made of blancmange because it wobbled slightly just as a brain would. Several volunteers were given an insight into how difficult it could be to perform a simple task – they were asked to unwrap and eat a sweet while wearing a pair of cumbersome gardening gloves.

“One of you used your teeth. That’s exactly the sort of attitude that helps recovery,” said Deborah.

The charity works with professionals such as GPs, social workers, occupational therapists and physios, who refer patients to them.

As well as being affected physically, patients can suffer from poor concentration, personality change, poor perception and judgment and fatigue.

“By improving their self esteem and confidence we can help them rebuild their lives,” said Deborah. Some people recover well enough to go back to work, or to become volunteers and some become mentors for others with brain injuries.

There are four Headway branches in Hampshire, all independent and self funding. “We get no financial help so we have to raise all the money we need,” she said and asked if anyone would like to carry out a tandem sky-dive next June to raise funds!

There is a nurse-led helpline at Headway UK that provides information on all aspects of brain injury.

Acting president Tracy Gardiner presented Deborah with a cheque for £25 and gave the good news. At the last business meeting the club voted to select the Portsmouth and South East Hampshire branch of Headway as the main charity to receive their support in 2015-16. “We’ll be asking you to come back when we hope to give you a much bigger cheque,” said Tracy.

 

 

 

 

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