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At this webinar

Over 150 participants joined an HSCWRU Homelessness series webinar on ‘The epidemic of brain injury in multiple exclusion homelessness groups’ led by Steph Grant and Alistair Atherton, founding members of the Head Injury and Homelessness Research Group.

They proposed that to meet the challenge of this epidemic, social care and health services must acknowledge the scale of the problem and transform their dominant narrative around brain injury. Steph, a traumatic brain injury (TBI) survivor with firsthand experience of multiple exclusion, homelessness and co-morbidities, described his personal journey and the transformations that leave him a passionate academic and activist. Alistair is a neuropsychologist who accompanied Steph over the last 20 years, and presented the evidence base and reflections from a clinical perspective.

Participants shared their own experiences and reflections, and thanked Steph for sharing his story, and both speakers for an ‘Inspiring and thought provoking’ presentation: ‘a huge thank you and I will take this back to my nursing colleagues and colleagues in the hostels I work with’.

See: Steph and Alistair's slides.

Next time

The next webinar in this series, will focus on Psychological approaches to working with people experiencing homelessness.

Join the mailing list

The Homelessness series is part of the Homelessness Research Programme at the NIHR Policy Research Unit in Health and Social Care Workforce, King's College London. To join the mailing list please contact jess.harris@kcl.ac.uk

Other events at the Unit

See other upcoming events run by the NIHR Policy Research Unit in Health and Social Care Workforce at King's College London. These events are free. All welcome!

In this webinar Steph Grant and Alistair Atherton will highlight what can be described as an epidemic in brain injury in MEH (multiple exclusion homelessness) groups. They will propose that to meet the challenge of this epidemic, services must acknowledge the scale of the problem and transform their dominant narrative around brain injury. Steph and Alistair are founding members of the Head Injury and Homelessness Research Group.

Steph Grant is a traumatic brain injury (TBI) survivor with first hand experience of multiple exclusion, homelessness and serious co-morbidities. He will describe his personal journey along this bleak path and the transformations in his life that leave him almost 40 years later, a passionate academic and activist for keeping our eyes peeled for brain injury in homeless and other excluded groups.

Alistair Atherton is a practising neuropsychologist who has accompanied Steph over the last 20 years and has learned how services can turn away from the reality of brain injury.

Homelessness series at King's

The webinar, which takes place on MS Teams only, is part of the Homelessness series, organised out of the NIHR Health and Social Care Workforce Research Unit, King's College London.

Please get in touch with Jess Harris if you would like to join the mailing list for the Homelessness series.

At this event

Jess Harris

Research Fellow