Family and Community
The family will become experts in services for traumatic brain injuries(TBI); Social Security, Medicare, Medicaid, and Department of Rehabilitation regulations, while trying to adjust to a family member who has had a TBI. Many times this beloved family member had been hanging on the edge of death for unending hours, days, weeks, or even months.
When they come out of the coma, they are not the same as they were. In most cases they are not able to do what they used to do, and their behavior may be dramatically changed.
This will cause significant stress in the family structure; statistics show that 90% of families facing TBI are not able to stay together. The community involvement will
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To qualify for Social Security the individual and family if they are financially responsible, cannot have more than $2000 in resources as a single, or $3000 in resources for a couple.
This doesn't include the home they live in or the car(within limits) they use to go back and forth to the doctor. For most Americans, we would see this as totally destitute, but currently this is the requirement. In California, SSDI, the minimum cash aid, is around $800 and it will go up depending on the amount the consumer contributed to the federal program. Here in California, the consumer would be qualified for
Medicare and Medi-Cal which involves a maze of paperwork and regulations. Under this program there is a $2000 a year cap on Durable Medical Equipment (DME), which has to cover the expanse of assistive technology like reachers(devices that grab items out of reach) to bladder bags. These are not luxuries, but items that can change the quality of life for an individual and their families who have just experienced the traumatic incident of a brain injury.
There are different social services available to individuals and families that have been involved in a TBI such as
Occupational Therapists (also called OT). OT services mainly focus on activities
The Intentional Family is a book about strengthening family connections and relationships through everyday rituals, holiday celebrations, special occasions and community involvement. The book serves as a guide to help families transform simple family routines into family rituals. It discusses the importance of being consistent with good family rituals and compromising to change rituals that do not work. Doherty states that family rituals provide four important things, predictability, connections, identity, and a way to enact values. He gives many examples and suggestions on how families can best create rituals from activities they may already be doing. Many families have rituals that they feel “stuck” with. Doherty also
In 1974, my mother, and her lower class family, emigrated from Canada to New City, New York. They moved frequently back and forth between various American and Canadian cities due to my grandfather’s lack of finding long-term employment; he has a book filled with pages upon pages of business cards and papers recording his numerous previous employers. Eventually, my grandfather found a steady job in print, working for the New York Times in 1985, my grandmother opened her own bookstore for a brief period in time, and my mother and her siblings all attended and graduated from four-year colleges. The entire family continues to retain sole Canadian citizenship. As improved a life they have been provided, not all immigration stories have such a happy ending. Most immigrant families coming from south of the United States border, in the same financial situation as my mother and her family had been, will not have such luck. They are stuck in a paradox of stereotypes, between being perceived by the suburban white family as “lazy” or “taking all of our jobs.” Why is it that we turn a blind eye to our neighbors to the north, as if they collectively live up to the stereotype of unfaltering niceness? Though much has been said about these immigrants coming to the United States from Latin America, very little attention is being paid to the immigrants coming from Canada and Western Europe due to prejudice.
Feldman, R. S. (2014). Development across the life span (7th ed.). Upper Saddle River, NJ:
Families are involved in their children’s learning through many different means. Parents are greeted by the kindergarten teachers at morning drop off and at the end of the day for dismissal and if any information needs to be disclosed or discussed the teachers and parents will take that opportunity to communicate with each other. Communication to families is also done through letters that go home whenever there is important information that needs to be shared. This works successfully for the parents who have nannies or relatives drop off and pick up their children. In this case, when face to face contact is not being made with
Family is a basic unit in every society. However, the makeup of a family is more complex to define. There are so many types of families that it is impossible to have one distinct definition in trying to explain how a true family is defined. For example, there are married couples with or without children, single-parent families, and even families headed by gay men or lesbians. These may not have been considered families not too long ago, but now must be recognized because we live in such a diverse society. What I want to focus on is the African-American family, in terms of what they had to go through before, during, and after slavery. As well as, where they are now and where it’s going in the future.
Growing up I believed that the three bears in the tale of Goldilocks were a family because they lived under the same roof and ate at the same table. I also believed that Barbie and her little sister, Skipper, were family because they looked alike, and that Mr. Potato Head and Mrs. Potato Head were family because they were married. Now that I am grown, my understanding of family has matured, and many sources have helped shape my belief. Carol Shields points out in her article, “Family Is One of the Few Certainties We Will Take with Us Far into the Future,” that all around us there are different definitions and symbols of family (Shields 558). In short, a family does not have to conform to
The 1950’s were a decade of growth and expansion. Growth of the middle class, expansion of religion and a growing economy kept Americans on the move- literally. Families were moving from the cities and into the suburbs. “This massive shift in population from the central city was accompanied by a baby boom that started during World War II. Young married couples began to have three, four, or even five children (compared with only one or two children in American families during the 1930’s) (The American Story, pg. 729). This style of living began making the immediate
When we hear the term TBI, we tend to think in the abstract since we do not see the brain as an appendage. We have trouble understanding or even confuse mental and behavioral disorders, as being the consequence. When people say “he’s not the same as he used to be, he’s changed,” they don’t realize this is who he is now. When discussing with the family TBI, it is important to share with them that result in disabilities depend on the location of the injury, general health of the patient, age, and severity of the injury (Grant and Adams,
According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) (2010), approximately 1.7 million individuals are diagnosed with a traumatic brain injury (TBI). Within the medical and allied health care professions, various definitions are utilized to define what constitutes a TBI (Abelson-Mitchell, 2007). Despite such various definitions, a TBI essentially describes any form of trauma directed at the brain and its surrounding anatomical structures (Abelson-Mitchell, 2007). As with most injuries, a TBI is graded as mild, moderate, or severe; however, in contrast to most severe injuries, a severe TBI can detrimentally affect an individual’s motor and cognitive functioning (Abelson-Mitchell, 2007; CDC, 2010).
There are different kinds of rehabilitation treatments available for patients post brain injury. For example, the patient may stay as in-patient or receive out-patient care at a clinic or other therapy centers, or depending on severity obtain treatment at home. Patients staying at a facility receive either individual treatment or therapy in group settings which may also include the use of a computer. Memory problems are most common among patients and therapy is important to reduce problems. For example, “individuals with mild to moderate impairments should
Working in an elementary school, I have had several times when I have met someone with a different worldview than mine. For instance, I have had students that are Jehovah's Witness. Some challenges that I have had relating to those students are centered around holidays activities and birthday parties. One of my students was not allowed to participate in any holiday activities or birthday parties. Her parents did not celebrate holidays or birthdays and they did not want her to participate. If we had a special Christmas program, I would have to arrange for her to go to a different classroom. My principle would let her come help her during any special events.
Determining family structure and dynamics as well as defining the family is a complex process. Personally, I come from a very traditional family. Much like the assumptions made by the students in the article Defining Family: Young Adults’ Perceptions of the Parent-Child Bond by Mellisa Holtzman (2008). This is what comes to mind when most people define family; a nuclear family, with married parents, and biological children. However, a family is a complex system and can take on many different forms.
Meetings. An adviser shall be present at chapter meetings for the election of officers, revision of chapter Bylaws and Standing Rules, preparation and presentation of the budget, committee meetings — including those of the Nominating Committee and consideration of disciplinary action by the chapter and Standards Committee — and for Chapter Council meetings, membership selection sessions, officer training, and Initiation. G.
I have a big family including two extremely strict and traditional parents, three brothers, and a sister. my parents are great parents who care about their five children well being and education. however they are over protective and not understanding. the dynamic of the family is very enmeshed. in a sense emashed families are good to have. however, mashed families at the expose of members having their idependce is not. My parents are traditional and have set values and beliefs. It is hard for my siblings and i to have a conversation with them. They do not understand the new culture and generation. my siblings and i can not have a real conversation with them that does not involve school, or home-life. They constantly complain that we do talk to them. But there is a reason why we do not communicate. they are judgmental and critize the things we do.
No one can’t meet a family like mine’s. My family is well diversified. Every family member plays an important role in all my family’s lives. In my family, there are four people: my father, my mother, my little brother and me. My father is one who brings money home and is also responsible for organizing and planning family trips. My mother is the one who is in charge for making meals and makes sure everyone eats at the appropriate times. My little brother is the pet of the family. He actually doesn’t have any responsibilities, for he’s the pet. I am the rock of support in my family. I always go beyond my parents’ expectations. I also support my younger cousins and little brother, by being a role model that they can look up to. Another