Journal article

Social functioning in children with brain insult

M Greenham, MM Spencer-Smith, PJ Anderson, L Coleman, VA Anderson

Frontiers in Human Neuroscience | Published : 2010

Open access

Abstract

Social dysfunction is commonly reported by survivors of brain insult, and is often rated as the most debilitating of all sequelae, impacting on many areas of daily life, as well as overall quality of life. Within the early brain insult (EBI) literature, physical and cognitive domains have been of primary interest and social skills have received scant attention. As a result it remains unclear how common these problems are, and whether factors predictive of recovery (insult severity, lesion location, age at insult, environment) in other functional domains (motor, speech, cognition) also contribute to social outcome. This study compared social outcomes for children sustaining EBI at different t..

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University of Melbourne Researchers