Patients Guiding Stroke Research
These days there’s a consumer group to fight our cause in nearly every walk of life. Now a remarkable group of humans are using their own experience to help shape pioneering research into the medical treatment and rehabilitation of stroke patients.
Members of The Nottingham Stroke Consumer Group don’t hold back when it comes to offering academics their opinions. In fact they are better qualified than most to give it. They may come from different backgrounds business, university lecturing, the civil service, nursing, manufacturing and IT but they have one thing in common, they have all suffered a stroke.
Set up three years ago the group meets four times a year with senior academics and researchers from The University of Nottingham to discuss and evaluate the latest research and go through grant applications for funding in fine detail. Its aim is to improve and develop treatment for stroke victims by focusing research more closely on the needs of stroke victims.
After a stroke eight years ago Nottinghamshire businessman Ossie Newell spent seven weeks in hospital. He went home in a wheelchair; he couldn’t walk, write or dress himself. Looking back he describes his recovery as miraculous. He is now secretary and treasurer of The Nottingham Stroke Consumer Group and is currently organising a string of events across Nottinghamshire that year to raise awareness of what they do. He said: “We have currently an estimated 16,000 to 19,000 citizens living with the after effects of stroke in Nottinghamshire and I want them all to know what the group does and what it can achieve by being there to influence stroke research and therefore ultimately the treatment and rehabilitation after stroke.”
Stroke is the commonest cause of death after cancer and heart disease. 130,000 folks suffer a stroke every year. A third will die; a third will prepare a full recovery; and third will suffer serious disability. No age group is immune an average of six to seven children under 16 suffers a stroke each week.
Experts from The University of Nottingham are leading the way in stroke rehabilitation research. Marion Walker,
Other members of the group include Jenny Darby, a retired lecturer at Loughborough University. After her stroke she was allowed to carry on her work despite being unable to speak a word for the first six months of her recovery. Since her stroke she has completed a PhD.
Malcolm Jarvis was a manufacturing consultant and travelled the world. He had just published a book on teaching and lecturing in work study when he suffered a stroke. Since soon after he has written a book about Oxton Cricket Club where he used to be a playing member.
Norma Fenton was a civil servant in Whitehall.
Charles Russell was a charge nurse at the Queen’s Medical Centre.
Phil Noskeau worked for the Open University and was an IT trainer. He has developed the astroke web site for the sister organisation of that group and has just been nominated by the group for a Stroke organization ‘Life After Stroke Award’.
Original post by Mallows
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