04641nam 22007815 450 991062928510332120230810180543.09783031186523(electronic bk.)978303118651610.1007/978-3-031-18652-3(MiAaPQ)EBC7129817(Au-PeEL)EBL7129817(CKB)25299539900041(DE-He213)978-3-031-18652-3(PPN)265857902(EXLCZ)992529953990004120221031d2022 u| 0engurcnu||||||||txtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierThe Physical, Personal, and Social Impact of Spinal Cord Injury From the Loss of Identity to Achieving a Life Worth Living /by Jenny Lieberman1st ed. 2022.Cham :Springer International Publishing :Imprint: Springer,2022.1 online resource (112 pages)SpringerBriefs in Public Health,2192-3701Print version: Lieberman, Jenny The Physical, Personal, and Social Impact of Spinal Cord Injury Cham : Springer International Publishing AG,c2022 9783031186516 1 Background -- 2 Interventions -- 3 Subjective Experience -- 4 The Future -- Index.This compact book uniquely examines individual lived experience with spinal cord injury (SCI). It provides education and a clearer understanding of the many facets of a SCI -- medical, physical, psychological, cognitive, personal, and social -- in a single compact volume, so that readers learn the effect a SCI can have on a person. The contents also include resources for more specific exploration of information. SCI is a direct public health concern due to not only the cause of the injury itself, most often of violent origin, but also how the individuals perceive themselves after the injury and their participation in society, as well as how society welcomes them back. This compact book has four distinct chapters, each one addressing a different component of SCI with a set of resources to guide the individual with SCI, their family and their friends in the process. It first explores the physical as a means to provide an understanding of what body changes occur. From there, it goes on to examine what is the subjective meaning and lived experience of disability for persons with SCI. The brief ends with an examination of what organizations and programs exist to promote independence and a sense of community for persons with SCI. The Physical, Personal, and Social Impact of Spinal Cord Injury: From the Loss of Identity to Achieving a Life Worth Living is a book with broad appeal. It is written in such a way that it serves as a useful and accessible resource for people who work with persons with SCI, students and instructors with an interest in the subject, as well as persons with SCI themselves and their families. Jenny Lieberman, PhD, OTR/L, ATP is a senior clinical specialist of wheelchair seating and positioning in the Department of Rehabilitation and Human Performance at The Mount Sinai Hospital Center in New York, NY, USA. She is also an adjunct professor in the Department of Occupational Therapy at New York University in New York, NY, USA.SpringerBriefs in Public Health,2192-3701Public healthOccupational therapyPhenomenologyClinical psychologyRehabilitationMentally illRehabilitationMedical sciencesOccupational health servicesPublic HealthOccupational TherapyPhenomenologyRehabilitation PsychologyHealth SciencesOccupational HealthPublic health.Occupational therapy.Phenomenology.Clinical psychology.Rehabilitation.Mentally illRehabilitation.Medical sciences.Occupational health services.Public Health.Occupational Therapy.Phenomenology.Rehabilitation Psychology.Health Sciences.Occupational Health.617.482044617.482044Lieberman Jenny1265461MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQ9910629285103321The Physical, Personal, and Social Impact of Spinal Cord Injury2967820UNINA