Antecedent management and compliance training improve adolescents' participation in early brain injury rehabilitation

Children and adolescents with serious brain injuries are surviving in greater numbers, often entering rehabilitation settings while still emerging from coma. As the child s or adolescent s level of conscious ness improves, increased demands to begin participating in self care and therapeutic activit...

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Veröffentlicht in:Brain injury 1997-12, Vol.11 (12), p.877-890
Hauptverfasser: SLIFER, K. J, TUCKER, C. L, GERSON, A. C, SEVIER, R. C, KANE, A. C, AMARI, A, CLAWSON, B. P
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container_end_page 890
container_issue 12
container_start_page 877
container_title Brain injury
container_volume 11
creator SLIFER, K. J
TUCKER, C. L
GERSON, A. C
SEVIER, R. C
KANE, A. C
AMARI, A
CLAWSON, B. P
description Children and adolescents with serious brain injuries are surviving in greater numbers, often entering rehabilitation settings while still emerging from coma. As the child s or adolescent s level of conscious ness improves, increased demands to begin participating in self care and therapeutic activities are presented. When the patient is unable to participate because of disorientation and agitation, the benefits of the rehabilitation admission may be jeopardized, limited rehabilitation resources may be prematurely exhausted, and behavioural sequelae often escalate. A non concurrent multiple baseline across subjects experimental design was used to examine the effects of a behaviour management approach employing both antecedent environmental manipulations and operant conditioning based compliance training. Data are presented on therapy attendance, disruptive behaviour, and agitation ratings across three recently brain injured adolescents as therapeutic demands were gradually intro duced. In all three cases, therapy attendance stabilized at a high level, disruptive behaviour decreased, and agitation was maintained at a moderate to low level. The results demonstrate the importance of carefully controlling the environment and coordinating the introduction of both therapeutic demands and positive reinforcement contingencies during early recovery from brain injury.
doi_str_mv 10.1080/026990597122954
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A non concurrent multiple baseline across subjects experimental design was used to examine the effects of a behaviour management approach employing both antecedent environmental manipulations and operant conditioning based compliance training. Data are presented on therapy attendance, disruptive behaviour, and agitation ratings across three recently brain injured adolescents as therapeutic demands were gradually intro duced. In all three cases, therapy attendance stabilized at a high level, disruptive behaviour decreased, and agitation was maintained at a moderate to low level. 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source Taylor & Francis:Master (3349 titles); MEDLINE; Taylor & Francis Medical Library - CRKN
subjects Adolescent
Behavior Therapy
Behavior therapy. Cognitive therapy
Biological and medical sciences
Brain Injuries - rehabilitation
Female
Health Promotion
Humans
Medical sciences
Patient Compliance
Psychology. Psychoanalysis. Psychiatry
Psychomotor Agitation - psychology
Psychomotor Agitation - therapy
Psychopathology. Psychiatry
Treatments
title Antecedent management and compliance training improve adolescents' participation in early brain injury rehabilitation
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