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The Psychosocial Impact of Neurobehavioral Disability

Claire Williams Orcid Logo, Rodger Wood, Nick Alderman, Andrew Worthington

Frontiers in Neurology, Volume: 11

Swansea University Authors: Claire Williams Orcid Logo, Rodger Wood, Nick Alderman, Andrew Worthington

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Abstract

Neurobehavioural disability (NBD) comprises elements of executive and attentional dysfunction, poor insight, problems of awareness and social judgement, labile mood, altered emotional expression, and poor impulse control, any or all of which can have a serious impact upon a person’s decision-making...

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Published in: Frontiers in Neurology
ISSN: 1664-2295
Published: Frontiers Media SA 2020
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URI: https://cronfa.swan.ac.uk/Record/cronfa53411
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first_indexed 2020-02-03T19:23:28Z
last_indexed 2020-10-24T03:05:45Z
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spelling 2020-10-23T11:32:58.6461054 v2 53411 2020-02-03 The Psychosocial Impact of Neurobehavioral Disability 21dc2ebf100cf324becc27e8db6fde8d 0000-0002-0791-744X Claire Williams Claire Williams true false 7d67e475699a3b3ab820b4a5d2602dc9 Rodger Wood Rodger Wood true false 1593af77d08757805fa8874face821b5 Nick Alderman Nick Alderman true false 2f2db77aa6fd69a641394c3ae5409372 Andrew Worthington Andrew Worthington true false 2020-02-03 HPS Neurobehavioural disability (NBD) comprises elements of executive and attentional dysfunction, poor insight, problems of awareness and social judgement, labile mood, altered emotional expression, and poor impulse control, any or all of which can have a serious impact upon a person’s decision-making and capacity for social independence. The aim of this narrative review is to explore some of the more intrusive forms of NBD that act as obstacles to psychosocial outcome to act as a frame of reference for developing effective rehabilitation interventions. Special consideration is given to the psychosocial impact of three core forms of NBD: a failure of social cognition, aggressive behaviour, and problems of drive/motivation. Consideration is also given to the developmental implications of sustaining a brain injury in childhood or adolescence, including its impact on maturational and social development and subsequent effects on long-term psychosocial behaviour. Journal Article Frontiers in Neurology 11 Frontiers Media SA 1664-2295 neurobehavioural disability, social cognition, Apathy, Aggression, Psychosocial outcome, Empathy, Moral Development, Brain Injury 20 2 2020 2020-02-20 10.3389/fneur.2020.00119 COLLEGE NANME Psychology COLLEGE CODE HPS Swansea University 2020-10-23T11:32:58.6461054 2020-02-03T12:01:04.7645626 Faculty of Medicine, Health and Life Sciences School of Psychology Claire Williams 0000-0002-0791-744X 1 Rodger Wood 2 Nick Alderman 3 Andrew Worthington 4 53411__16678__ec171deb98804c8a9d152cf3c4f3b3a4.pdf 53411.pdf 2020-02-24T15:40:23.3187493 Output 600719 application/pdf Version of Record true Released under the terms of a Creative Commons Attribution License (CC-BY). true eng http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
title The Psychosocial Impact of Neurobehavioral Disability
spellingShingle The Psychosocial Impact of Neurobehavioral Disability
Claire Williams
Rodger Wood
Nick Alderman
Andrew Worthington
title_short The Psychosocial Impact of Neurobehavioral Disability
title_full The Psychosocial Impact of Neurobehavioral Disability
title_fullStr The Psychosocial Impact of Neurobehavioral Disability
title_full_unstemmed The Psychosocial Impact of Neurobehavioral Disability
title_sort The Psychosocial Impact of Neurobehavioral Disability
author_id_str_mv 21dc2ebf100cf324becc27e8db6fde8d
7d67e475699a3b3ab820b4a5d2602dc9
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author_id_fullname_str_mv 21dc2ebf100cf324becc27e8db6fde8d_***_Claire Williams
7d67e475699a3b3ab820b4a5d2602dc9_***_Rodger Wood
1593af77d08757805fa8874face821b5_***_Nick Alderman
2f2db77aa6fd69a641394c3ae5409372_***_Andrew Worthington
author Claire Williams
Rodger Wood
Nick Alderman
Andrew Worthington
author2 Claire Williams
Rodger Wood
Nick Alderman
Andrew Worthington
format Journal article
container_title Frontiers in Neurology
container_volume 11
publishDate 2020
institution Swansea University
issn 1664-2295
doi_str_mv 10.3389/fneur.2020.00119
publisher Frontiers Media SA
college_str Faculty of Medicine, Health and Life Sciences
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hierarchy_top_id facultyofmedicinehealthandlifesciences
hierarchy_top_title Faculty of Medicine, Health and Life Sciences
hierarchy_parent_id facultyofmedicinehealthandlifesciences
hierarchy_parent_title Faculty of Medicine, Health and Life Sciences
department_str School of Psychology{{{_:::_}}}Faculty of Medicine, Health and Life Sciences{{{_:::_}}}School of Psychology
document_store_str 1
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description Neurobehavioural disability (NBD) comprises elements of executive and attentional dysfunction, poor insight, problems of awareness and social judgement, labile mood, altered emotional expression, and poor impulse control, any or all of which can have a serious impact upon a person’s decision-making and capacity for social independence. The aim of this narrative review is to explore some of the more intrusive forms of NBD that act as obstacles to psychosocial outcome to act as a frame of reference for developing effective rehabilitation interventions. Special consideration is given to the psychosocial impact of three core forms of NBD: a failure of social cognition, aggressive behaviour, and problems of drive/motivation. Consideration is also given to the developmental implications of sustaining a brain injury in childhood or adolescence, including its impact on maturational and social development and subsequent effects on long-term psychosocial behaviour.
published_date 2020-02-20T04:06:21Z
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