• About Us
  • Brain Injury Network (BIN)
  • Abuse, Expoitation, Victimization
  • Academic Attribution
  • Blast Exposure Brain Injury
  • Ban Football
  • Brain Injury Survivor Priorities
  • Brain Injury Advocacy by and for People
  • Brain Injury Advocates Book
  • Brain Injury Network Forums
  • Brain Injury Survivor Identifiers
  • Brain Injury Survivor Movement
  • By and For the Brain Injury Survivors
  • California Dept. of Rehabilitation
  • California or Local
  • Calif. Senate Health Committee Testimony
  • Cautionary Tale
  • College Disability Programs
  • Contact Us
  • DOR CA TBI
  • Easy Picture Links
  • Easy Text Version
  • Health Care Reform
  • Hospital Trauma Centers
  • How You Can Help
  • Human Rights of People With Brain Injury
  • International Standards
  • Laws and Legislation
  • Lawyers and Attorneys
  • LInk To Us
  • LINKS
  • Mandated Reporters
  • mTBI and Neuroimaging
  • National Standards
  • Online Community
  • Please Donate to the BIN
  • Policy Advocacy ABI Forum
  • Post-Acute Sequelae of Covid-19 (PASC)
  • Postsecondary BI Programs
  • Postsecondary Protocols
  • Post-TBI Syndrome Dear Medical Community
  • Privacy Policy
  • Protect Your Privacy
  • Public Policy
  • Public Policy in Chronological Order
  • Public Policy Index
    • Best Practice Guidelines
    • Bicycle Helmet Law
    • Brain Injury Community
    • Brain Injury and Parental Rights
    • Building Code Standards
    • Classification of TBI
    • Clinical Research
    • Cognitive Retraining
    • Community Reintegration
    • Comprehensive Health Reform
    • Concussion and Sports
    • Conflict of Interest in Medical Research
    • Counselor Training
    • Crime
    • Department of Mental Health
    • Devicing While Driving
    • Disability Rights and Issues
    • Disclosures, Advocates
    • Disclosures, Medical Providers
    • Disclosures, Researchers
    • Disclosures, Web Sites
    • Doctor Education
    • Driving While Devicing
    • Drug Companies
    • Empowerment, Patient
    • Exposing Brain Injury Survivors' Identie
    • Feeding Tube
    • Financial Institutions
    • Fluorescent Lighting Mandate Waiver
    • Food and Water
    • Funding Priorities for Survivors
    • Gold Standard Research Studies
    • Helmet Laws
    • High School Graduation
    • Hospital Privacy and Consent
    • Hospital Settings and Patients
    • Hospital Trauma Centers in the USA
    • Human Research Guidelines
    • Identification as People
    • Law-Abiding Survivors
    • Incarcerated Criminals with ABI
    • Law Enforcement
    • Laws and Recommendation
    • Least Restrictive Living Environment
    • Living Environments
    • Local and County Services
    • Locked Facilities
    • Mandated Medical Review
    • Mandated Reporter Law
    • Medical Device Makers
    • Mental Illness
    • National Centers: Costly Duplication
    • Nursing Home Placements
    • Nutrition and Hydration
    • Online Recruitment of Patients
    • Patient Recruitment to Medical Studies
    • Organizations or Providers Offering Mone
    • Parental Rights and Brain Injury
    • Patient Data Harvesting
    • Patient Empowerment
    • Persistent Vegetative State (PVS)
    • Persistent Wakeful but Unaware State
    • Physician Disclosures
    • Political Correctness
    • Political Sensitivity
    • Post-Acute Medical Environments
    • PostConcussion Syndrome
    • PCS is Physiological in Origin
    • Post-Secondary Education
    • Post-Secondary Programs
    • Privacy Online
    • Privacy Settings on Web Sites
    • Profiting from Exposing Our Identities
    • Psychologist and Counselor Training
    • Psychotropic Drugs, Use of
    • PTSD (Post Traumatic Stress Disorder)
    • Post-TBI Syndrome-Proposal
    • QEEG
    • Raising Money to Promote Med. Research
    • Recruitment Methodology
    • Removal of Life Support
    • Research Studies Full Disclosure
    • School Age Children with ABI
    • Sports or Athletics Activities
    • Skiing and Helmets
    • Social Community On-Line Networking
    • Social Media Recruitment
    • Sports Medical Review
    • Stakeholders, Third Party
    • State Brain Injury Survivor Councils
    • Stigma and Brain Injury
    • Stigma, Marginalization, Stereotypical
    • Strokes are not TBIs
    • Subclassification Hierarchy of ABI
    • Support Group Facilitation
    • Survivor Advocacy
    • Survivor Advocates
    • Survivor Identity, Exposure of
    • Survivor Community Priorities
    • Survivor Stories in Media
    • TBI is a Subset of ABI
    • Terminology
    • The Term "Survivor"
    • Universal Health Care
    • Veterans, US Armed Forces
    • Victimization
  • Search This Site or the Net
  • Services Prioritization
  • Survivor Advisory Council
  • Survivors As Stakeholders
  • The Survivors' Point of View
    • A Chronic Disease
    • A Cure for Brain Injury?
    • A Stroke is Not a TBI
    • Advocates: Conflicts of Interest
    • Brain Injury Awareness
    • Brain Injury Support Groups
    • Can We Be "Trained"?
    • Definitions of ABI and TBI
    • Facebook Is Not Safe
    • 2009 Independence Day Message
    • Internet Providers Share Your Info
    • Medical Designations
    • Our Own Advocacy
    • Politically Correct Terminology
    • Post-TBi Syndrome (PTBIS)
    • Research, Clinical Trials, Studies and P
    • SABI Brain Injury Advocacy Forum
    • SABI
    • Survivor Organizations
    • Social Communities
    • Use of the Term "Survivor"
    • Why We Need Collective Advocacy
  • What We Survivors Need
  • Who Represents Us?
  • Worldwide Brain Injury Community Awarene
  • Blank 2
Donate
DONATE

Who Represents Us?

Who is Representing Individuals with Brain Injuries?
Who represents our survivor community? Who really represents brain injury survivors? There are many entities and agencies which purport to represent us, to advocate for us, to speak for us, and to be a voice for us. It is very easy for anyone or any agency to say that it represents us. But what would be the true measure that we are being properly represented by any agencies or institutions? Would it not be that our issues, all of them, are being championed by the "representative" entity? Would it not be that our brain injury survivor interest is being placed ahead of all other interests? Would it not be that our input is sought and our counsel is found at the most senior levels of the agency?
Would it not be that no business interest controls the policy formulated by the agency? Would it not be that no business interest is sought out to pay the salaries of the key personnel of the agency? How can staffers speak for us when they are paid by business interests that have their own agenda? Yes, the agenda might be helpful in many ways to the survivor community, but it will not be identical to the survivor agenda. If the salaries of key staff are paid by business interests, would it not be reasonable to assume that their loyalty will actually be to the business interests paying their salaries as opposed to the brain injury survivor community?
Another factor to look at in the assessment of whether or not an institution, agency, or business has properly spoken for the survivor community is to look at the long track record, if any, of representation. Has the agency championed our issues over a long period of time? Has it sought out the input of the survivor community? Does that agency have a formalized modality for interacting with the brain injury community, for example, a brain injury survivor council, or is its main interaction with the brain injury survivor community to steer us to affiliated service providers or to ask us to donate to the organization? Has it made any promises it has actually delivered upon? Has it made promises that it has never delivered on? Has it sought more from the survivor community than monetary support and "story sharing?"
Has the agency or institution that says it speaks for us protected our privacy, gone on the offensive about bad business practices that harm us, or spoken out about the need for a basic human safety net for us? Or, has it mostly endeavored to protect and promote business interests and professional interests?
These are just a few of the things that should be thought of if one is contemplating whether or not an entity purporting to represent we people with brain injuries actually conducts business the way we would like to see it done.
There is at least one agency that actually does communicate peer-to-peer with the brain injury community. There is one that is bringing forth the many issues that we survivors deal with every day of the year. The agency will take on controversial issues and will go head-to-head with interests that are doing things that can bring us harm. Yes, that agency is this one, the Brain Injury Network, an all-survivor brain injury international organization particularly interested in advocacy issues and public policy for our community. We don't have to be careful not to offend business interests. We don't ignore issues that might put some perhaps costly regulations on service providers. Of course, providers don't really want to promote regulations or oversight. We survivor advocates at the Brain Injury Network, on the other hand, think that sometimes regulations, laws, standards, and protocols are a very good way to optimize programming for us, the survivor community. And rules and regulations are a good way to help ensure that we are not harmed.
We would like agencies that purport to represent us to actually do that. Fight for us. Don't just be a repository for service providers and business interests. Fight for us even if it may be uncomfortable for some key players who don't want the bother of protocols and regulations. We like laws, protocols, regulations, rules, and program oversight. They help ensure our safety. They help improve our rehabilitation, our outcomes, and our lives. That is what we would like to see out of people, or agencies, or institutions that say that they "represent the survivors."
See also: Why We Need Collective Advocacy, California Department of Rehabilitation, ABI/TBI Survivor Priorities, Brain Injury Advocacy, Brain Injury Advocates
ABI/TBI Definitions, About BIN, Ban Dangerous Sports,Brain Injury Advocacy, Brain Injury Forums,Brain Injury Names, By and or Brain Injury Survivors, California Area BIN, Cautionary Tale, Classification, Contact Us, Chronic Disease?, Concussions and Football, Distribution List, Easy Version, Global Issues,Health Care Reform, Home, How You Can Help, Human, Legal and Civil Rights, Independence, International Standards, Laws and Legislation, Links, Mandated Reporters, National Standards, News, Online Community, Please Donate, Postsecondary Program Protocols, Post-TBI Syndrome, Privacy Policy, Protect Your Privacy Public Policy, Public Policy Index, Research/Clinical Trials/Studies, SABI Advocacy Forum, SEARCH, Shop OnLine and Help BIN, The Survivor Movement, The Survivors' Viewpoint,Terminology, Who Really Represents Us, Who We Are,Worldwide Brain Injury Community,Your Privacy Settings on the Internet
© Copyright 1998-2023. Brain Injury Network
All rights reserved.

We use cookies to enable essential functionality on our website, and analyze website traffic. By clicking Accept you consent to our use of cookies. Read about how we use cookies.

Your Cookie Settings

We use cookies to enable essential functionality on our website, and analyze website traffic. Read about how we use cookies.

Cookie Categories
Essential

These cookies are strictly necessary to provide you with services available through our websites. You cannot refuse these cookies without impacting how our websites function. You can block or delete them by changing your browser settings, as described under the heading "Managing cookies" in the Privacy and Cookies Policy.

Analytics

These cookies collect information that is used in aggregate form to help us understand how our websites are being used or how effective our marketing campaigns are.