Humanising Connections: Bringing people together in rehabilitation
Editorial
We are human – an invisible and fundamental aspect of rehabilitation in acquired brain injury
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- 07 June 2022, pp. 1-3
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Connection: stories not statistics
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- 11 February 2022, pp. 4-8
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Original Article
‘The wairua first brings you together’: Māori experiences of meaningful connection in neurorehabilitation
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- 13 December 2021, pp. 9-23
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It takes two to tango: The therapeutic alliance in community brain injury rehabilitation
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- 10 December 2021, pp. 24-41
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Developing connections for engagement in stroke rehabilitation
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- 27 December 2021, pp. 42-59
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Knowing-in-action that centres humanising relationships on stroke units: an appreciative action research study
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- 19 April 2022, pp. 60-75
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Comparing participation in sports discussion and art therapy groups in ABI
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- 07 January 2022, pp. 76-90
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Humanising brain injury rehabilitation: a qualitative study examining humanising approaches to engagement in the context of a storytelling advocacy programme
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- 08 October 2021, pp. 91-103
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Thinking Otherwise: Bringing Young People into Pediatric Concussion Clinical and Research Practice
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- 29 November 2021, pp. 104-117
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Clinical Practice: Current Opinion
The Lived Experience of Interdependence: Support Worker Relationships and Implications for Wider Rehabilitation
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- 15 November 2021, pp. 118-124
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How does a narrative understanding of change in families post brain injury help us to humanise our professional practice?
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- 17 September 2021, pp. 125-133
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Humanising health and social care: What do family members of people with a severe acquired brain injury value most in service provision
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- 14 April 2022, pp. 134-142
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