TBI-TARC

DC

Client(s)

Administration for Community Living

Dates

September 2019 — September 2024

Status

Completed

Opportunity

Supporting timely, coordinated services for brain injury

The Traumatic Brain Injury Technical Assistance and Resource Center (TBI TARC) is a national center funded by the Administration for Community Living. HSRI served as the Center’s administrator along with National Association of State Head Injury Administrators (NASHIA), helping states promote access to integrated, coordinated services and supports, and resources for people who have sustained a traumatic brain injury (TBI), their families, and their caregivers.

Approach

Integrating and coordinating services

Human services play a key role in ensuring that all people can reach their potential. Traumatic brain injury can be complex and may affect people throughout their lifetime; and since TBI can produce an especially wide spectrum of symptoms and disabilities, people living with TBI may need access to variety of services to reach their potential. To better understand these complexities, funding agencies, researchers, and people with lived experience of TBI have teamed up to gather better evidence that will support practice recommendations and improve treatment. And through ACL’s TBI State Partnership Program, states are collaborating to determine how best to provide these services.

Streamlining access and ensuring quality

States often serve individuals living with brain injury through multiple programs—Medicaid, employment, education, mental health, substance abuse, long-term care, and more. Coordination among these programs is essential for several reasons:

  • Improve access to community-based services. Without coordination, getting services can be an overwhelming challenge for people and their caregivers—logistically, financially, and psychologically.
  • Track availability. States need to know if certain factors are affecting the availability of services in certain communities (factors like geographic limitations, lack of transportation, scarcity of affordable housing, etc.).
  • Enhance provider training. Enhancing training and education across providers and disciplines can help ensure the quality and consistency of services statewide.
  • Plan and monitor for quality and outcomes. Coordinated data systems can help states link people to available services (reaching out to people recently hospitalized for TBI), plan for and estimate the number of people needing services, and follow up with people with TBI to see how they’re faring.

Leading with experience

To assist the cross-state collaborations and help maximize the impact of ACL’s TBI State Partnership Program, HSRI and NASHIA administered TBI TARC—contributing their longtime expertise and wide networks in the areas of person-centered system design, TBI, technical assistance, and state resources.

People with lived experience receiving TBI services and other subject matter experts will be helping to guide and oversee TBI-TARC activities, ensuring that states’ service system transformations are person-centered. These experts by experience are uniquely positioned to help plan and develop services and supports that encourage both community inclusion and the personal independence of people with TBI.

Impact

TBI can be chronic and progressive, but timely access to proper interventions and community services can lessen its impact on people’s lives. By pooling our collective knowledge of TBI, person-centered systems design, and available resources, we’ve helped states develop strong and sophisticated infrastructures to supply these services.

Project tags

Services

Technical Architecture & System Design
Technical Assistance & Training

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