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The Effectiveness of Rehabilitation for Cognitive Deficits Peter W. Halligan (School of Psychology, Cardiff University, UK)

The Effectiveness of Rehabilitation for Cognitive Deficits By Peter W. Halligan (School of Psychology, Cardiff University, UK)

The Effectiveness of Rehabilitation for Cognitive Deficits by Peter W. Halligan (School of Psychology, Cardiff University, UK)


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Summary

Discusses the effectiveness of rehabilitation methods used to treat patients with cognitive impairments following acquired brain damage. This book provides a critique and consensus about what should constitute best practice. It is for all those who deals with the neuropsychological and neurological effects of brain damage.

The Effectiveness of Rehabilitation for Cognitive Deficits Summary

The Effectiveness of Rehabilitation for Cognitive Deficits by Peter W. Halligan (School of Psychology, Cardiff University, UK)

Many patients with brain damage are left with a range of neuropsychological deficits that impair normal cognitive process. It is generally recognised that these less obvious cognitive deficits (including memory, language, perception, attention and executive disorders) militate against full recovery often to a greater extent than more traditional medical deficits (e.g. paralysis, sensory loss, etc). Recognition of this has helped fuel the exponential growth in cognitive neuropsychology and neuroscience over the past 30 years. In turn, this theoretical approach has been used to guide and inform the development of cognitive therapies designed to remediate cognitive impairments and their functional consequences. Cognitive rehabilitation has over the last decade grown to become an established and influential therapeutic approach. There is now a considerable body of knowledge describing the principles and theoretical basis for analysing and directing treatments to selective cognitive deficits. Despite this, the clinical effectiveness and extent to which cognitive theory can inform therapeutic treatment has been questioned. It is timely, therefore, to evaluate and discuss the type and quality of evidence used in support of cognitive rehabilitation. In this book, some of the most influential clinicians and cognitive neuroscientists in the world critically review and discuss the effectiveness of rehabilitation methods currently used to treat patients with cognitive impairments following acquired brain damage. It provides a much needed critique and consensus about what should constitute best practice. The book will be valuable for all those who have to deal with the neuropsychological and neurological effects of brain damage, including, neuropsychologists, neuropsychiatrists, neurologists, experimental pscyhologists, and neuroscientists.

The Effectiveness of Rehabilitation for Cognitive Deficits Reviews

This is an excellent book on cognitive rehabilitation, providing a critical analysis of these treatments in a balanced and relatively unbiased manner. The authors are leading scientists and clinicians in the field and their expertise comes across in their precise and thoughtful chapters. This is probably the most comprehensive review on effectiveness of rehabilitation for cognitive deficits available and definitely worth owning for professionals and students alike. * Doody's Journal *

Table of Contents

1. Introduction ; HISTORICAL AND CONCEPTUAL ISSUES ; 2. A history of cognitive rehabilitation ; 3. Cognitive rehabilitation and its relationship to cognitive-neuropsychological rehabilitation ; 4. Fundamentals of cognitive rehabilitation ; 5. Applying the WHO ICF framework to the rehabilitation of patients with cognitive deficits ; 6. Methodological issues in evaluating the effectiveness of cognitive rehabilitation ; ATTENTIONAL DISORDERS ; 7. Attentional behaviour: varieties, deficits and theoretical accounts ; 8. Testing speed and control: the assessment of attentional impairments ; 9. Treating attentional impairments: review with a particular focus on naturalistic action rehabilitation ; 10. Can disabilities from attentional impairments be effectively treated? ; MEMORY DISORDERS ; 11. The neuroanatomy of memory ; 12. The assessment of memory ; 13. Can memory impairment be effectively treated? ; 14. The effective treatment of memory-related disabilities ; SPOKEN LANGUAGE DISORDERS ; 15. Language: cognitive models and functional anatomy ; 16. Tried, tested and trusted? Language assessment for rehabilitation ; 17. Language deficits: the efficacy of impairment-based treatments ; 18. Can speech and language therapy affect activity and participation levels? A review of the literature ; EXECUTIVE DISORDERS ; 19. Theories of frontal lobe executive function - clinical applications ; 20. Assessment of executive dysfunction ; 21. Can executive impairments be effectively treated? ; 22. Rehabilitation of executive deficits: effective treatment of related disabilities ; COGNITIVE REHABILITATION THEORY ; 23. For a theory of cognitive rehabilitation: progress in the decade of the brain ; 24. The neural basis for a theory of cognitive rehabilitation ; PATHOLOGY-BASED OUTCOMES ; 25. Cognitive rehabilitation outcomes for traumatic brain injury ; 26. Outcome of cognitive rehabilitation in clinical stroke services ; 27. Cognitive rehabilitation in early-stage dementia: evidence, practice and future directions

Additional information

GOR013903333
9780198526544
0198526547
The Effectiveness of Rehabilitation for Cognitive Deficits by Peter W. Halligan (School of Psychology, Cardiff University, UK)
Used - Like New
Paperback
Oxford University Press
2005-09-29
414
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
The book has been read, but looks new. The book cover has no visible wear, and the dust jacket is included if applicable. No missing or damaged pages, no tears, possible very minimal creasing, no underlining or highlighting of text, and no writing in the margins

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