Tracking traumatic brain injury creates accountability, identifies patterns, and makes progress visible — especially important since traumatic brain injury distorts our perception of improvement.
Why Track Traumatic Brain Injury?
- Traumatic Brain Injury naturally waxes and wanes — tracking reveals patterns invisible to memory
- Seeing measurable improvement reinforces treatment motivation
- Tracking identifies triggers before they cause major traumatic brain injury episodes
- Data from tracking helps therapists optimize treatment
Ways to Track Traumatic Brain Injury
Daily mood ratings: Simple 1-10 rating of traumatic brain injury intensity, logged consistently
Validated questionnaires: Standardized scales for traumatic brain injury used before and during treatment
Journaling with structure: Specific prompts about traumatic brain injury triggers, symptoms, and coping
Behavioral tracking: Monitoring sleep, exercise, and social contact — predictors of traumatic brain injury
Interpreting Your Traumatic Brain Injury Tracking Data
Look for patterns over weeks and months, not day-to-day fluctuations. Share tracking data with your therapist or doctor to optimize traumatic brain injury treatment.