Scientific exchange and collaboration are often critical for developing and advancing world-class research programs. This was the motivation behind the development of Jefferson Moss Rehabilitation Research Institute's Scientist in Residence program. Last month, we were excited to welcome Lyn Turkstra, PhD, CCC-SLP, BC-NCD(A), for an in-person visit to the Institute. Dr. Turkstra is a Professor in the School of Rehabilitation Science at McMaster University, and she has been a Scientist in Residence at the Institute since 2019. During her visit, Dr. Turkstra connected with our researchers including Associate Director, Amanda Rabinowitz, PhD, to work on collaborative research projects focused on cognition and communication after brain injury.
Drs. Rabinowitz and Turkstra are working with colleagues in the Jefferson Moss-Magee Drucker Brain Injury Center (DBIC) in an effort to translate leading-edge research in brain injury rehabilitation to evidence-based clinical practice, as part of a Traumatic Brain Injury Model Systems knowledge translation project. In the previous Model System cycle, they successfully developed and implemented the MossRehab PTA Protocol for identifying patients with amnesia after traumatic brain injury (post-traumatic amnesia; PTA), educating staff and families about the patient’s memory deficit, and training the most effective means of communicating with affected patients to maximize their engagement in rehabilitation and their emotional well-being.