猫咪社区APP

Surviving Traumatic Brain Injury


Posted on July 25, 2019
Joy Washington


Kelsey Gross, 猫咪社区APP speech-language pathology graduate student, assists traumatic brain injury camp participant Larry Malone Jr., center, while music therapist Fred Ra leads Malone and other camp participants in creating a song using words suggested by the group. data-lightbox='featured'
Kelsey Gross, 猫咪社区APP speech-language pathology graduate student, assists traumatic brain injury camp participant Larry Malone Jr., center, while music therapist Fred Ra leads Malone and other camp participants in creating a song using words suggested by the group.

While playing little league baseball in the third grade, Larry Malone Jr. fell on the field. Several years later, he started having headaches, memory loss and blackouts. He was eventually diagnosed with a brain injury. Today, Malone is an adult working to recover.

Malone and 14 other survivors of traumatic brain injuries, ranging in age from 21 to 65, recently participated in a unique summer camp on the 猫咪社区APP campus. The University partnered with the Alabama Head Injury Foundation to host the Bright Ideas Traumatic Brain Injury Camp in 猫咪社区APP鈥檚 Health Sciences Building, providing speech and audiology services, physical therapy and music therapy for the 15 survivors. Their caregivers/loved ones were invited to participate in counseling sessions, art therapy, education, assessments and a nutrition session during the three-day, therapy-based camp.

The camp was a life-changing experience for all involved, especially the students.

鈥淭his is a great opportunity for us as students,鈥 said Kelsey Gross, a first-year, graduate student at South and a native of League City, Texas, who worked with Malone during the camp. 鈥淭his camp has given us great exposure to patients with a wide variety of traumatic injuries. It鈥檚 also been great to collaborate as a multidisciplinary group interprofessionally with speech and audiology, physical therapy and nursing. It鈥檚 been wonderful for us to see the lives of TBI survivors get better and hope restored through this camp experience.鈥 

South Alabama鈥檚 College of Nursing and the joined in the multidisciplinary effort to help the survivors continue to move forward with their recovery 鈥 emotionally, physically and cognitively. For example, in a music therapy session, certified music therapist Fred Ra worked with Malone and the other survivors to write their own group song using words they suggested, such as 鈥渕om,鈥 and 鈥渟econd chance.鈥 They each will receive a copy of the completed song they helped create during their therapy session.

鈥淭his is such an exciting opportunity for our students to be involved in this collaborative care model,鈥 said Dr. Elizabeth Adams, associate professor and chair of speech pathology and audiology. 鈥淭his interprofessional collaborative practice model is the way healthcare is going. The model helps the students understand their individual roles better and the roles of other professionals in the healthcare setting. Overall, it helps our students develop collaborative teamwork skills to take with them once they graduate and work as professionals.鈥

Kendra Hudson, senior instructor and clinical coordinator of speech-language pathology, met earlier with representatives from AHIF and agreed that South Alabama needed to host this type camp for survivors and caregivers in this region of Alabama. Hudson and the faculty and staff worked with the AHIF team to plan, manage and execute the camp.

Scott Powell, executive director of the Alabama Head Injury Foundation, is already planning for the next camp.

鈥淭he partnership between AHIF and 猫咪社区APP on this Bright Ideas TBI Camp is truly remarkable, because at the end of the camp, you can honestly debate who benefitted the most through participating. The survivors? The caregivers? The students? The faculty? I would say it鈥檚 all of the above,鈥 Powell said. 鈥淎nd just having three days where individuals can take an active interest in their well-being is a win.鈥

According to the AHIF, there are 260 individuals in Mobile County and 140 in Baldwin County who are survivors of a traumatic brain injury. More than 2,000 individuals are affected statewide.


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