Fall 2015 - Brain Injury Alliance of Wisconsin
Transcription
Fall 2015 - Brain Injury Alliance of Wisconsin
BIAW NEWS · FALL 2015 BIAW NEWS A Quarterly Newsletter for Individuals with Brain Injury, Families, and Professionals Fall 2015 In This Issue: Summer 2015 .................................... 1 Executive Director’s Message ........... 2 Walk for Thought .............................. 3 Three Goals for 2015-16 ................... 4 Thank You ......................................... 5 Survivor Submissions ....................... 5 BIAW in the News............................. 6 Research Opportunity ........................ 7 Support Groups...............................8-9 BIAW in Action ............................... 10 Donors & Members ......................... 11 BIAW Conference ........................... 12 Save the Date for the BIAW Annual Brain Injury Conference May 2-3, 2016 BIAW NEWS · FALL 2015 BIAW Mission Statement The prevention of brain injury and the full participation in life for individuals with brain injury 2015-2016 Board of Directors Mike Klug, Vice-President Perry Schroeder, Treasurer Jan Heinitz, Secretary Bob Babel Kelly Kjell Jackie Kuhl Audrey Nelson Kevin Pasqua Staff: Karl Curtis, Executive Director Newsletter Editors: Karl Curtis Contributing Writers: Karl Curtis Eric Lindquist Published by: Brain Injury Alliance of Wisconsin N63 W23583 Main Street, Suite A Sussex, WI 53089 1-262-790-9660 1-800-882-9282 [email protected] www.biaw.org From the desk of the Executive Director Karl Curtis Executive Director Newsletter Director’s notes Hello! My name is Karl Curtis, and I am the new executive director of the Brain Injury Alliance of Wisconsin. I came on board in mid-October, just in time to attend the Walk for Thought in Brookfield. Prior to joining the BIAW I served as the executive director of the Verona Area Chamber of Commerce in Verona, WI and before that I spent nearly 10 years as a local journalist. My personal experience with brain injury began on June 18, 1998 when my son, then only nine-years-old, was diagnosed with a cancerous brain tumor. He was treated with surgery, radiation and chemotherapy, and has been classified as having an acquired brain injury. The good news is my son is now 26 years old, has a steady part-time job, and all his health reports have been positive, but he still deals with many of the issues typical of brain injury – memory difficulties, balance issues, anger, depression, etc. It has been a pleasure, and also very educational, to meet many of you during my first month on the job. One thing I have learned is while there are many common threads among the survivors I have met, no two brain injuries are exactly the same. I look forward to meeting with more of you over the coming months and learning from you all how the BIAW can best serve our shared community. In the meantime, feel free to contact the BIAW and share your thoughts, concerns and stories. ************************************* I encourage you to submit items you think might go well in the winter newsletter to [email protected]. We are particularly interested in news from survivors and updates from support groups around the state. Help Opportunity Prevention Education Website Improvements www.biaw.org Our website is improving. Please be patient while we work to serve you better. 2 BIAW NEWS · FALL 2015 2015 Walk for Thought The Brain Injury Alliance of Wisconsin’s 2015 Walk for Thought was held October 3, 2015, at Fox Brook Park in Brookfield and the Sports Complex in the village of Ashwaubenon. While Mother Nature may have thrown the groups a curve with some wind and cold, there was plenty of warmth generated by all those who walked for the cause! The scenes below are from the Brookfield walk, and we’d love to get a few photos from Ashwaubenon. Thank you to those who attended and sponsored this wonderful event. We hope you will join us again next year! Thank you to our sponsors: Clearview Brain Injury Center Columbia St. Mary’s/Sacred Heart Rehabilitation Institute Froedtert Hospital Homes for Independent Living 3 Lakeview Specialty Hospital & Rehab LearningRX MCFI NEXDAY REM Wisconsin UW Health & Unity BIAW NEWS · FALL 2015 News from the BIAW BIAW has Three Goals for Upcoming Year thoughts. We are always glad to hear from you at [email protected]. Web Site Improvements In this electronic age, a great web site is an asset to any organization. With this in mind the BIAW is looking to upgrade its current web site some time in the next year. At the October BIAW board of director’s meeting, the board expressed three primary goals for the next year. Those goals are to host an outstanding Annual Brain Injury Conference this coming May, to expand the reach and activities of the group to more of This effort will require expertise and money. the state of Wisconsin, and to upgrade the organization’s web site to make it more modern and user friendly. If you know a web designer or hosting company that might be willing to work with the BIAW and perhaps donate or discount All three of these goals present opportunities for involvement and services, please let us know at [email protected]. input from the broader community across the state. As we begin our web site upgrade we will also be searching for Annual Brain Injury Conference sponsors and other donations. A donation of any size will always All members of the greater brain injury community are encourbe appreciated. Additionally, a new web site will offer advertisaged to attend the BIAW Annual Brain Injury Conference on ing opportunities to businesses and individuals. If you would like May 2-3 at the Wilderness Resort in Wisconsin Dells. The conmore information about contributing in any way to a new BIAW ference provides a vast array of educational, networking and so- web site, please send an e-mail to [email protected]. cial opportunities for all who attend. Support the BIAW You can also help the conference planning committee by providing input. If there is a topic you would like addressed, or if you know of a terrific speaker or presenter who would be a hit with attendees, please send your suggestion to [email protected]. While we may not be able to act on every suggestion, all input will be considered and is greatly appreciated. Does your employer have an end of year giving program? Are you searching for a worthy cause for end of year giving? Statewide Reach Why not consider a donation to the BIAW? The BIAW works with support groups across the state and provides information and other resources to the brain injury commu- Visit our web site, www.biaw.org, to learn about various giving nity throughout Wisconsin, but we want to do more. levels. Go to the “Donate” tab and following it to “Membership.” You can help by being the eyes and ears of the BIAW. If you know of any groups or activities to which the BIAW can lend support such as publicity, speakers or information, please let us know. Similarly, if you have ideas about ways the BIAW can be more active in your part of Wisconsin, feel free to share your If you would like to donate in the more traditional way, you can mail a donation to BIAW, N63 W23583 Main Street, Suite A Sussex, WI 53089. All donations are tax deductible. 4 BIAW NEWS · FALL 2015 Thank You The Brain Injury Alliance of Wisconsin would like to thank former executive director Kasey Johansen for her past service to the BIAW. Kasey stepped down from her position in July, but graciously continued to serve as interim director until her replacement could be hired. She played a key role in organizing this year’s “Walk for Thought” and also the initial organizational efforts of the 2016 BIAW Conference. The BIAW wishes Kasey and her family all the best in their future endeavors. Survivors’ Submissions With God’s Love By Marnie Housel Spooner, WI I shall, with God’s love, Successfully, rise above My BRAIN INJURY, For he has given to me – The strength of an ox, in order to Accomplish, what I want to do. Moreover, and what’s more, He has allowed me to abhor The need for pity, Because, you see: I am alive, and Christ, is too – So, with this in mind, please do Not try to hinder my attempt To be normal, with your contempt, For what you do not understand. Thus, my brain injury, was all planned, By the Father, So, that knowledge, could gather, As a result of my accidents. We are, alas, students Of the ALL-Mighty, And, thus, we Should attempt to better learn, His wisdom, in order to earn, God’s approval – It is important: His call Must be heard, and whether we understand it, or not – We, at least, have got To do His will. So, let us fill, Our hearts, with love for the weak, sick, and desperate: And not loathe, or hate What it is, that we do not understand. Because, with God – it’s all been planned! Marnie Housel is a brain injury survivor. This poem was submitted for her by Jim Richie of the Rice Lake Brain Injury Support Group. Patron Member, Jan Heinitz, in honor of Christina Guild 5 BIAW NEWS · FALL 2015 BIAW in the News Severe brain injury spurs local woman to help others like her; she's being honored for efforts Audrey Nelson has learned to never say no after a life-altering traffic crash in 1981 By Eric Lindquist Audrey Nelson’s life changed forever on Oct. 24, 1981. It was on that date that another vehicle struck a car the then-18-year-old Nelson was riding in head-on, trapping her and the driver, and completely rerouting her young life. Nelson suffered a serious brain injury in the crash, which occurred on an icy stretch of Highway 27 between Cadott and Cornell, and needed a surgeon to implant a metal plate in her head. “I had a depressed frontal lobe fracture,” Nelson recalled this week. “That’s not good. That’s the part of your brain that helps you think and plan.” While the brain injury affects Nelson somewhat to this day — she has a hard time following a rigid schedule and occasionally mixes up her words — she didn’t let it stop her from devoting her life to helping some of the estimated 1.7 million Americans who sustain traumatic brain injuries annually. Nelson, now 52, will be recognized with a silver award Monday at a Milwaukee luncheon for her remarkable comeback story by Disability Rights Wisconsin. She is one of several individuals statewide who will be honored at DRW’s Spirit of ADA Awards in conjunction with the 25th anniversary of the passage of the Americans with Disabilities Act. The awards recognize people and organizations who are positively changing and improving the lives of people with disabilities in Wisconsin. Nelson is the owner and director of Reality Unlimited, a company operating two group homes for people with brain injuries or neurological issues, and has been a co-facilitator of a brain injury support group in Eau Claire since 1983. She is president of the Brain Injury Alliance of Wisconsin and a member of the Long-Term Care Council for the state Department of Health Services, the Eau Claire B.R.A.I.N. Team, the Mayo Clinic Traumatic Brain Injury Model System Regional Advisory Board and the Treatment Instead ofPrison Task Force of JONAH (Joining Our Neighbors Advancing Hope) in Eau Claire. “She’s a real firecracker,” Jodi Hanna, director of DRW’s Rice Lake office, said of Nelson. “She just has a lot of energy and she cares so passionately about this issue.” Hanna said she believes Nelson’s injury and recovery prompted her to work hard so others can have similar opportunities. “That is at the heart of what she does,” Hanna said. “She wants others to enjoy a full life after brain injury.” For her part, Nelson said her experience put her in a unique position in terms of advocacy — she struggled enough to understand the pain of brain injury but recovered enough to be able to speak for those who can’t. Audrey Nelson stands Thursday outside the Mike Wilson House, 2409 Rudolph Road, one of two group homes she operates in Eau Claire for people with brain injuries. Nelson, who sustained a serious brain injury in a 1981 car crash, will be recognized next week by Disability Rights Wisconsin for her long service to people with brain injuries. Photo by Steve Kinderman ber the words, and she had a hard time controlling her temper. “The outlook was pretty grim at the time,” said Nelson, a Cornell High School graduate. But Nelson defied the experts by refusing to put limits on herself. She attended UW-Eau Claire the following year, majoring in social work, and managed to earn a bachelor’s degree despite only reading one textbook. She later earned a master’s degree in vocational rehabilitation at UW-Stout in Menomonie, got married and had three children, now 26, 22 and 18. “The No. 1 thing people say about people with brain injuries is that they have unrealistic expectations. Well, thank God for unrealistic expectations,” Nelson said, adding with a chuckle, “The good thing about a right frontal lobe injury is that you can’t really understand everything, so you don’t take no for an answer.” When it comes to brain injuries and expectations, Nelson said, “I always say, ‘Never say never, and never say always.’ I believe in taking baby steps until you get where you want to go.” While she was still a student at UW-Eau Claire, Nelson met a woman, Dorothy Wilson, whose son suffered a brain injury after being hit by a drunken driver and who was advocating for a grant to start a group home catering to the specific needs of people with brain injuries. In 1983, Nelson, Wilson and Carol Joles started a brain injury support group in Eau Claire. The group has met once a month ever since. When asked about this long-standing gift to the community, Nelson humbly replied, “It’s really been more of a gift to me.” When Nelson and her husband opened their first group home 20 years ago this week for people with brain injuries, Nelson named it the Mike Wilson House after Dorothy Wilson’s son, the inspiration for the facility. Mike Wilson died in 1991, 12 years after his accident, and his mother was clearly touched by Nelson’s tribute. “That was so nice of Audrey,” Dorothy Wilson Exceeding expectations After her accident, a neurosurgeon told Nelson, a freshman at Northwestern College in the Twin Cities at the time, that she probably would never be able to give birth or return to school. She could read but was unable to comprehend or remem- 6 BIAW NEWS · FALL 2015 said. “She has really done a lot for people with brain injuries.” Making progress The recent flood of attention to concussions in sports symbolizes the positive change in attitudes about brain injuries in the United States, Nelson said. Nelson recalled being involved with the former National Head Injury Foundation when the organization approached the National Football League in the 1980s to discuss head injures associated with the sport. NFL officials refused to acknowledge the problem. “For the kind of awareness we see today to be happen- ing is amazing,” she said. “Now when I tell people I had a brain injury, they kind of understand what that means.” That awareness, she believes, can lead to better care and treatment for people with brain injuries. And for Nelson, that’s what it’s all about. Audrey Nelson is a former president of the BIAW and current member of the board of directors. This article appeared in the online edition of the Eau Claire Leader-Telegram on Oct. 2, 2015. Reprinted with permission. 7 BIAW NEWS · FALL 2015 Statewide Network of Brain Injury Support Groups NORTHWEST CENTRAL Brain Injury Support Group Frederic Public Library 127 Oak Street West Frederic, WI 54837 2nd Friday of the month 2 pm -3:30 pm Julie Martin, [email protected] (715) 327-4474 Wausau Rice Lake Lakeview Medical Center Conference Room 1100 North Main Rice Lake, WI 1st Sunday of the month 1:30 pm - 3:30 pm Corinne & Jim Richie (715) 234-0079 NORTHEAST Brown County N.E.W. Curative Rehabilitation 2900 Curry Lane Green Bay, WI 54311 Quarterly @ 5:30 pm Jessica Drumm, [email protected] (920) 593-3562 Aspirus Wausau Hospital 333 Pine Ridge Boulevard Wausau, WI 2nd Wednesday of the month 6:30 pm Lea Ratajczyk, [email protected] (715) 847-2826 Making New Connections NORTHWEST – EAU CLAIRE AREA Wisconsin Traumatic Brain Injury Support Group Sacred Heart Hospital-Eau Claire 900 West Clairemont 3rd Thursday of the month Eau Claire, WI 7 pm -8:30 pm Chastity Krings, [email protected] (715) 308-6052 or Rhonda Olson, [email protected] (715) 717-4392 Mild Brain Injury Group Luther Campus Clinic Entrance Deli Conference Room 1221 Whipple Street Eau Claire, WI 3rd Tuesday of the month 5:30 pm - 6:30 pm Mary Beth Clark, [email protected] (715) 838-3258, Michelle Knutson (715) 838-1725 Bay Evangelical Covenant Church 2280 Nicolet Drive Green Bay, WI 54311 4th Wednesday of the month @ 7 pm Karen Feld, Facilitator, [email protected] Oshkosh TBI Support Group Oshkosh Aurora Medical Center 855 N. Westhaven Drive Oshkosh, WI 54904 4th Thursday of the month 6:30 pm – 8:30 pm Michael Athanasiou, [email protected] (920) 233-3655 Sheboygan Area Miracle Point Brain Injury Society St. Nicholas Hospital/Francis Room 3100 Superior Avenue Sheboygan, WI 53081 1st Monday of the month (September-May) 6:30 pm – 8 pm Amber Slaby, [email protected] (920) 459-4642 SOUTHWEST Big River Chapter-LaCrosse Gundersen Medical Center 1st floor of Mooney Education Library LaCrosse, WI 2nd Tuesday of the month 5 pm - 7 pm Elizabeth Rand, RN, [email protected] (608) 775-4063, Brittany George, OT Appleton St. Elizabeth Hospital 1506 S. Oneida Street Appleton, WI 4th Monday of the month 6 pm - 7:30 pm Mitch Cornils, [email protected] (920) 731-9831, x111 8 BIAW NEWS · FALL 2015 Statewide Network of Brain Injury Support Groups SOUTHEAST - MILWAUKEE AREA SOUTHEAST Embracing Hope Waukesha County Heading Forward Acres of Hope and Aspiration W147 S7138 Durham Place Muskego, WI 4th Wednesday of the month 6 pm - 7 pm *Advance Registration required* Lisa K. Alberte, RN, [email protected] (414) 405-4722 Waukesha Memorial Hospital 725 American Drive Waukesha, WI 1st Wednesday of the month 6 pm - 7:30 pm Jennifer Micheau, [email protected] (262) 928-2351 Dodge County Clearview Brain Injury Center 198 County DF Juneau, WI 3rd Monday of the month 6 pm - 7 pm Tammy Novotny, [email protected] (920) 386-3403 Brain Injury Support Group NEXDAY Brain Injury Rehab Center 9350 W. Fond Du Lac Ave Milwaukee, WI 3rd Tuesday of the month 6 pm - 7:30 pm Katie Ryan, [email protected] (414) 797-0038 Kenosha County: Stateline TBI Support Group for Functioning Teens and Adults First Christian Church 13022 Wilmot Road Kenosha, WI 3rd Tuesday of the month 7 pm – 8:30 pm Beth Jankowski, [email protected] (262) 344-1505 SOUTH CENTRAL – MADISON AREA Mild Brain Injury Resource Network One Tower Conference Room Meriter Hospital 202 South Park Street Madison, WI 3rd Thursday of the month 6:30 pm - 8:00 pm Deb Enburg, Ph.D., [email protected] (608) 845-6356 Waterford Lakeview Specialty Hospital & Rehab Dining Room 1701 Sharp Road, Waterford, WI. Second Tuesday of the month 6:30pm -8:00 pm Caroline Feller, [email protected] 262-534-7297 Mild Brain Injury Group for Spouses & Significant Others Meriter Hospital, Patient Registration Area Conference Room 202 South Park Street Madison, WI 2nd Monday of the month 6:30 pm - 8 pm Lynn Hovey, [email protected] For changes, addition, or more information: Tele: (262) 790-9660 ● Website: www.biaw.org Email: [email protected] (608) 222-4717 or (608) 576-5285 Janesville Rock County Brain Trauma Support Group 2200 W. Court Street, Suite 130 Janesville, WI 53548 2nd Tuesday of the month 6 pm - 7 pm Brenda Brown, [email protected] (608) 752-4993 9 BIAW NEWS · FALL 2015 BIAW In Action Janesville Conference The Brain Injury Alliance of Wisconsin was very happy to participate in the Catholic Charities Brain Injury Conference in Janesville on October 22. The event provided an outstanding opportunity to learn and network with survivors, providers and researchers from all around the state. Pathways Brain Injury Unit 10 BIAW NEWS · FALL 2015 Members & Donors Brain Injury Alliance of Wisconsin extends sincere appreciation to the following individuals, families, and/or organization who supported the Alliance through new/ renewal memberships and/or donations during the current fiscal year. Members: Courtesy: Dawn Cieszynski Anna Diefenthaler Joseph Grissom Heather Kapp Carolyn Knight Darlene Price Dennis Oseth Nadia Rivera Dawn Wallace Individual: Robert Babel Jay Baukin Sharon Bloomgarden Melinda Carr Anthony Destefano Donna Destefano Brian Dieschbourg Glenda Fowler Michael Hineberg Mary Hoerth David Hoffman Lynn Hovey William Jamieson Amy Killmer Jennifer Kolp Karen Krouch Lisa Jensen Marta Lecher Adam Lenhardt Bridgette Leonauskas Arlene Nelessen Sarah Porter Corrine Richie Mary Sandmire Jennifer Sauer Diane Schluter Anne Siegel Kimberly Virden Family: Mike & Roxann Crabb Jill Flory Turk & Beth Flory Dennis & Kelli Goldsmith Joe Goldsmith & Heather Kowalewski Wendy, Danny, Ross, & Mitchell Gottschalk Kasey, Brian, Kaitlyn, & Tony Johanson David & Susan Keller Mike & Kevin Klug Paul & Nichelle Martin Ronald, Barb, & Scott Preder Paul & Sharon Sauer Christine & Hannah Tarrant Tom & Andrea Tatlock John, Marilyn, & Sarah Van Der Puy Carolyn & Peter Zytkus (We apologize for any omission or errors in our list and request that you contact the Alliance office to report any oversight.) Professional: Michael Athanasiou Jane Bey Brenda Brown Gordon Johnson, Jr. Craig Jordan Robert Karol Kelly Kjell Kathy Klika Sue Krueger Jackie Kuhl Beth Moore Audrey Nelson Dean Olejniczak Jodee Plazek Jason Pirtle Rebecca Politis Sarah Porter Lea Ratajczyk Lorna Reed-Severson Katelyn Ryan Denise Stelpflug Sonja Stoffels Patron: Brain Injury Law Group Jan Heinetz, in honor of Christina Guild Independence First Pathways Norwood Health Center Corporate: Lakeview Hospitals & Rehab MCFI NEXDAY ProHealth Care Neuroscience REM Wisconsin Rozek Law Office Founder: Betty Lou Lewis Donations in Honor of: Jessica Schluter By: Diane Schluter Heather Stevens By: Bev & Jerry Nelson Scott Herman By: Frank Pagliaro Heather Stevens By: Bev & Jerry Nelson Donors: James Blask Carol Bronikowski Paul & Mary Brunner David Breen Wines Ron & doreene DeVillers Caryn Easterling Mark Ernst Epic Kathleen Francke General Electric Company Elin Hudson Brian & Kasey Johanson Craig Jordan Kasana Susan Keller Kelly Kjell Mike Klug Diane Lisowski Julie Llewellyn Gary Munz Netrix Kent Newbury Tim Nustad Diane Riedel Perry & Laurie Schroeder Kevin Schumacher Todd & Peggy Stair Ed & Tammy Stone Tom & Andrea Tatlock Lyn Turkstra Linda Vegoe Western Wisconsin Cares Willis & Jill Wolfe Christine Zabkowicz Diane Zollitsch Memorial Donations: Jerry Barker By: Michael & Kate Blochinger Michele Boyer Nancy Brill Roger Dreher Karen Hanes Sally Hanson Van & Lylia Hare Karen Krouch Dean Montour William & Barbara Newcomer Doretta Raymond Karole & Bruce Kurnow Gilbert Bonnin By: Faye Bonnin Joy Paulbeck Donald Mastaglio By: Kathleen Francke We thank all the donors who supported Chip In for Brain Injury golf outing & the Walk for Thought. 11 BIAW NEWS · FALL 2015 Upcoming Events Save the Date Brain Injury Alliance of Wisconsin ANNUAL BRAIN INJURY CONFERENCE May 2-3, 2016 Wilderness Conference Center Wisconsin Dells, WI N63W23583 Main Street · Suite A Sussex · WI · 53089 12