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Ballet pilot to benefit those living with brain injury

Date Time Ballet pilot to benefit those living with brain injury Griffith University is a partner in Queensland Ballet’s Ballet for Brain Injury program. Image supplied by Queensland Ballet. A pilot program aims to revolutionise rehabilitation for people living with a brain injury by using ballet. Ballet for Brain Injury, a 10-week program launched by Queensland Ballet (QB), is supported by a review of existing research on dance for brain injury and related conditions by Griffith University researchers Joel Spence, Associate Professor Naomi Sunderland and Adjunct Research Fellow Belinda Adams. The first of its kind and developed in partnership with The Hopkins Centre, the Queensland Conservatorium Research Centre and Citrine Sun Entertainment, Ballet for Brain Injury aims to develop a new evidence-informed approach to engaging people living with brain injuries. Ten participants have been attending weekly classes along with their carer.

Griffith University: Ballet pilot to benefit those living with a brain injury

Griffith University: Ballet pilot to benefit those living with a brain injury
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Nothing after the ICU other than death : Behind the lines of Britain s Covid War

Nothing after the ICU other than death : Behind the lines of Britain s Covid War 13 minutes to read By: Alan Cowell The government has laid out plans for gradual reopening. But in cramped intensive care wards, teeming with patients and doctors near despair, the battle is unrelenting. The numbers may be trending downward, but the battle is no less intense. In the land of Winston Churchill, it is likened sometimes to war, the Covid war. In the latest phase of Britain s splintered campaign against the coronavirus, Prime Minister Boris Johnson last week laid out a long glide path for England s gradual reopening from lockdown, from March to June.

Behind the lines of Britain s COVID war - The Boston Globe

Behind the lines of Britain’s COVID war By Alan Cowell New York Times,Updated March 1, 2021, 11:20 p.m. Email to a Friend A nurse tried to reassure Haydar Sal, a COVID-19 patient in the Intensive Care Unit at Homerton hospital in East London, Jan. 17, 2021. Sal lost more than 65 pounds battling COVID.ANDREW TESTA/NYT LONDON — The numbers may be trending downward, but the battle is no less intense. In the land of Winston Churchill, it is likened sometimes to war, the COVID war. In the latest phase of Britain’s splintered campaign against the coronavirus, Prime Minister Boris Johnson last week laid out a long glide path for England’s gradual reopening from lockdown, from March to June.

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