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ABI Welless Expands Cognitive Recovery System through Center for Neurorehabilitation Services in Time for March

ABI Wellness Expands Cognitive Recovery System through Center for Neurorehabilitation Services in Time for March Share Article Responding to Consumers’ Needs for Virtual Care, the Vancouver-based Digital Therapeutic Company Expands Offerings in North America ABI Wellness’s BEARS (Brain Enhance And Recovery System) will help cognitive recovery clinics continue to provide care in spite of lockdown restrictions due to COVID-19 (https://abiwellness.com/brains “We hope [.] to help stimulate neuroplasticity and give a booster shot (if you will) to other more traditional types of cognitive recovery RICHMOND, Va. (PRWEB) March 25, 2021 ABI Wellness, creators of the integrated patient care, tracking, and reporting approach designed under CEO Mark Watson, today announced that its Brain Enhance and Recovery System (BEARS) is now available through the Center for Neurorehabilitation Services (CNS) in Richmond, VA, US

Brain Injury Awareness Month | News, Sports, Jobs

jsorensen@fairmontsentinel.com FAIRMONT Brain Injury Awareness Month is recognized each March according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). The month is meant to provide an important opportunity to bring attention to the prevention of traumatic brain injury (TBI) and to promote strategies to improve the quality of life for persons living with TBI and their families. Samantha Wendt of Sherburn shares her story of TBI and how it has affected her life, after a motor vehicle accident in 2016. Wendt and her oldest child were taken to a local ER following the accident, where they were later released after being told they had minor bumps, bruises, and some sprains. At the time, there was no mention of a concussion.

During Thanksgiving dinner at his home in Vermont two years ago, champion snowboarder Kevin Pearce, 27, finally told his family

By PETE REDINGTON 
Staff Writer Last modified: Wednesday, January 28, 2015 During Thanksgiving dinner at his home in Vermont two years ago, champion snowboarder Kevin Pearce, 27, finally told his family that he realized that the brain injury he had suffered in a crash on the slopes three years earlier had changed him forever. He looked at his brother David, 30, who has Down syndrome, and told him that he accepted the limitations he now faced. His days of X Games glory were over. Their mother Pia turned to David and asked: Would Kevin’s acceptance of his traumatic brain injury help David accept his Down syndrome? David’s eyes welled with tears as the other five family members sat silently. It was a long moment. “It’s hard,” David said finally. “But I will try.”

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