Thanks for the Memories
Dear MemoryZine,
My 26-year-old son, was in the Army at Fort Bragg. He suffered
a cerebral hemorrhage which impacted his short term memory. When
the event occurred, the neurologist said it would be six months
before improvement in my son's cognitive process would be noted.
But he was having a slow recovery. In the absence of any improvement,
the Army's clinical neuropsychologist would have to recommend a
Medical Board of Review to determine his future in the Army. We
had to find ways for my son to improve his memory skills through
practice.
He received the "Best Intentions" and "Nature of Memory" CD-ROMs
from Memory Works and began working with them diligently. His favorite
application was the Shopping List. And he did a lot of work matching
the similar objects under the cards from your memoryzine.com practice
area.
He was recently examined by the neurologist and passed the physical
part of the examination. Testing showed that his memory had improved,
but Bill reports that his memory is better than before he hemorrhaged.
There is no doubt that the cognitive exercises of your program were
instrumental in my son's total recovery. The Memory Works makes
it easy and fun to practice memory skills everyday. From the degree
of progress my son made from your programs, I would highly recommend
them to everyone.
Thank you for all your help.
D.J. Fox
La Palma, CA
Dear MemoryZine,
I've had a lot of fun with the CDs. I found the content to be well
organized and full of good new and review information. Particularly
interesting to me is the one for Names and Faces. I meet about five
to six people every day that I then see weekly or monthly for some
duration. It does get more and more difficult to recall their names
when I need to, so I have been trying your techniques. They work!
All of the exercises are challenging and enjoyable. I hope to return
to them frequently for more practice.
The quality of the program is impressive. Even though I am not
too computer-savy, I had no problem following the exercises.
I'm grateful for the program. My mother died of Alzheimer's disease,
so I know first-hand the devastation of the extremes of memory loss.
I encourage you in your work and research on memory because the
world needs it.
Thank you.
Sincerely,
Beth S.
Fort Wayne, IN
Dear MemoryZine,
My job as Cognitive Rehabilitation Therapist involves the in depth
assessment and treatment of cognitive problems following neurological
injury. Many patients demonstrate problems with attention, information
processing skills, memory and executive functions. The Memory Works®
CD -ROMs can be used to help with the treatment of all of these
difficulties. I am impressed with the clarity, and style of these
CD-ROMs, and in addition they provide useful educational information
and practice at using strategies. Of course, nothing substitutes
for one on one therapy and real life application, but in reality
there are not enough therapists and not enough time. The Memory
Works CDs offer an excellent support to the therapy, allowing the
patient to learn information at their own pace, and to apply the
strategies in simulated situations. My favourite CD is Best Intentions®,
since it operates in a simulated real life environment and focuses
on prospective memory - there are a lack of treatment materials
for this most handicapping of problems. I will also be recommending
them to individuals to use at home in their own time.
Kit B Malia, BEd, MPhil, CPCRT
Brain Tree Training
Surrey, England
Open letter from a prominent memory psychologist
regarding The Memory Works® Series.
As someone involved as an academic for the last 30 years in the
field of memory improvement, I can unreservedly recommend the CD
courses produced for The Practical Memory Institute By Doug Herrmann
and Dana Plude. Both men are unusual in that being successful academic
psychologists, they have taken the trouble to ensure that the best
of our recent findings on memory improvement has been combined with
the best of longer established findings to provide the learner with
a powerful array of memory techniques for tackling many of the everyday
memory problems that people in many walks of life face.
It is perhaps not surprising that they have chosen to do this since
they have made a considerable contribution themselves to advancing
our knowledge of memory improvement, in the area of memory failures,
memory problems in everyday life and in the need for a multimodal
approach to memory improvement and an array of strategies for dealing
with different memory problems, rather than the usual over optimistic
advice which relies too simplistically on a narrow array of set
techniques.
Given the expertise of the authors, it is not surprising that all
the Memory Works courses, on Face/name remembering, on remembering
facts and figures, on the remembering of future actions and on the
nature of memory should be highly informative and based on methods
of presentation which themselves increase the interest, enjoyment
and memorability of what is being presented.
After being informed and entertained on these courses, any learner
will be in a position to remember a whole range of everyday memory
tasks to a far greater extent than otherwise. The courses represent
a major contribution to cognitive technology, a goal which Doug
Herrmann has long held to be of major importance as the founding
editor of the journal Cognitive Technology. I believe that these
interactive courses will be a major success in the field.
Michael M. Gruneberg, Ph.D.
(Professor Gruneberg is Senior Lecturer in Psychology at the University
of Wales, Swansea. He has published numerous scientific books and
papers on the practical aspects of memory. He has also published
the highly successful Linkword language courses, which use memory
aides to speed up foreign language learning. Dr. Gruneberg is past
Chair of the Society for Applied research in Memory and Cognition.)
Dear MemoryZine,
My friend told me that you were interested in feedback regarding
the Best Intentions Program that I purchased from PMI. - Here it
is:
I am an occupational therapist with over 20 years experience with
adults who have cognitive impairments as a result of acquired brain
injury or neurological disorders. I really like the Best Intentions
CD. It is the only program available that addresses memory within
functionally relevant and simulated tasks. The tasks are motivating
to clients as they are similar to the demands and tasks in daily
life. As an Occupational Therapist, I especially appreciate this.
In addition, it emphasizes a strategy approach which I believe is
essential in the treatment of persons with cognitive difficulties.
I like the 3D simulated "Day in the Life" the best. It
is well designed, and creative. The built in distractions and interruptions
simulate real life experiences that patients can easily relate to.
I am impressed with the high quality of the program. My only criticism
is that there is only one such scenario and I wish that there were
more. I also really like the memory monitor but I wish there was
a way to save client responses or print it out to compare at another
point in time. Same is true of the other "How to remember"
practice exercises - I wish there was a way to save or record responses.
I have been involved in running memory group programs using an
approach that involves repeated practice of the same strategy in
different practical contexts for older persons with mild cognitive
impairments (MCI) and more recently with women who have subtle memory
deficits and Lupus (SLE) , as part of an interdisciplinary research
project at a Medical Center in New York City. I have included your
website on my list of client resources within the group programs
that I am involved with. I also do workshops and lectures on Cognitive
Rehabilitation and have included your website on my list of treatment
resources. On occasion, I have showed a demo of the Best Intentions
CD within my presentations and it is consistently received with
enthusiasm. I highly recommend the Best Intentions CD without hesitation
because it is a high quality program and therapists need more treatment
materials that have functionally relevant tasks and situations to
address cognitive impairments. I am confident that practitioners
will find it very useful in clinical practice.
Joan Toglia, Ph.D., OTR/L
Dear PMI,
I work in an outpatient clinic with primarily acquired brain injury (CVA, brain cancer, tumor resection, etc... and TBI populations) and have been working with a particular client on the Best Intentions program. After using the program with me for only two weeks, including "A day in the Life" and the “take away program”, I observed him to spontaneously write down what he has to recall. His accuracy has improved from 0% to 50% (inconsistently).
As the OT, I need to address metacognition especially with TBI… this is why I like the ‘Memory Monitor’. Outcome measure is becoming more and more important for evidence based practice and proving the OT is a valuable therapy.
I see Best Intentions as a tool that can be used as home programming for a higher level functioning cognitive impairment. From an outpatient perspective, I see this program being very marketable to both OT and SLP.
I was very excited to see this program. It is by far the best I have seen and used--even with limitations (…great graphics by the way!)
Thank you,
Kathy W. Hill, MA, OTR/L,CBIS
OT Supervisor
Certified Brain Injury Specialist
Stillwater , MN
Dear Practical Memory Institute,
It is with great pleasure that I write this letter. I have been utilizing the Memory Works CD series for my client base which consists specifically of adults with catastrophic injuries including acquired brain injury and spinal cord injuries.
The CDs have opened up many lives with the "real life" exercises and interface as well as enhanced the opportunity to provide these individuals with a "light at the end of the tunnel". When you have suffered a traumatic brain injury, the diversity of cognitive impairment leaves an individual feeling hopeless until a clinician provides them with exposure to such tools as the Memory Works CDs.
It is often that I am asked by other clinicians (in occupational therapy and speech-language therapy) how these tools are implemented. I answer them that It is my pleasure to develop individual treatment plans using the Memory Works CD since no injury profile is the same.
I would have no reservation recommending the Memory Works CDs or to share how they have greatly assisted my clients.
Yours truly,
Deborah Crowe, RRP
Rehabilitation Consultant
Davwill Consulting Inc.
London, Ontario CANADA
Dear PMI,
I am a clinical neuropsychologist in a solo private practice in Virginia Beach, Virginia since 1992. My background includes a BA in Psychology, MEd and EdS in School Psychology, a PhD in Clinical Psychology, a post-doctoral Fellowship in Clinical Neuropsychology, board certified in neuropsychology ABPN, and a Fellow in the National Academy of Neuropsychology. My practice consists of evaluating and treating known or suspected neurologic disorders, and the most frequent referral is memory loss regardless of age. My treatment approach has been to incorporate an educational approach to the disorder in question and outlining a specific individualized practical plan for compensation and remediation. I have familiarity with many cognitive rehabilitation programs and strategies, and of all the commercially available programs I have found the MemoryZine training CDs to be practical, easy to use, and beneficial to my clients. Most of my recommendations include a consideration to visit www.memoryzine.com as well as to purchase the CDs. I have purchased them, and use them to demonstrate to clients how they can do this at home. If requested we can conduct the training within our office. Those clients who have purchased the CDs typically buy one or two specific titles to work on, and they have expressed satisfaction in its ease of use, practicality, and generalizability to daily living demands. I have been very pleased with the outcome. Thank you for developing a great product and an interesting website for my clients to visit and learn about memory.
Best Regards,
Scott
Scott W. Sautter, Ph.D., ABPN
Hampton Roads Neuropsychology, Inc
Virginia Beach, VA
Dear Practical Memory Institute,
I am a speech-language pathologist and assistant professor of communication sciences and disorders. For the past 8-10 years I have been researching and working clinically in the field of cognitive rehabilitation. More recently I’ve been involved in computer-assisted cognitive rehabilitation. In my quest to find computer programs that would assist my patients with acquired brain injury I stumbled across the Practical Memory Institute and their Memory Works ® CD-ROM programs.
In a research study conducted this year, my student and I investigated the effectiveness of the Memory Works for Names and Faces CD-ROM on training adults with acquired brain injury to increase their memory for names and faces. There was a significant improvement noted between pre- and post measures of behavioral memory following participation with the Memory Works program. One participant, a 23 year old male with moderate memory impairment following a motor vehicle accident 2.5 years ago stated, “You have no idea how much better my names are…….I don’t know everybody perfect but I know 75 percent better than before.”
We also found that the Memory Monitor was a useful tool in tracking the participants’ level of performance. In our study, all participants reported higher scores in memory, social functioning, physical abilities, emotional status, and level of motivation following use of the program. In the areas of overall health and physiological factors affecting memory 87% of participants reported equal or higher scores following use of the Memory Works program. The Memory Monitor seems to have utility in providing patients a useful tool to help them identify and acknowledge their deficits.
I would recommend this CD-ROM for use with adults with mild acquired brain injury and subsequent memory impairment. With modifications that would allow the user to change the level of auditory and visual stimuli I feel this would be a useful tool for adults who have suffered more significant mild-moderate memory impairment.
Michael Fraas, PhD/CCC-SLP
University of New Hampshire
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