World Brain Day 2023 - Brain Health and Disability: "Leave no one behind".
Publication/Presentation Date
6-29-2023
Abstract
Worldwide, the number of persons with disability is assumed to be around 1.3 billion. Although several definitions exist, such as the medical and social models, the social model has more holistic approaches and engulfs more aspects. Historically, many considerations were based on eugenics until the middle of the 20th century when a change of paradigm occurred, and disability has since been subject to many developments in the past decades. Previously dependent on mercy and good will, disability has now become a human right, and the implementation of this change is still ongoing. Neurological diseases contribute worldwide to a large proportion of disability and can be classified as reversible or permanent, by their time course, and by disease specific elements. Addtionally, neurological diseases are often accepted and managed differently across cultures and are exposed to variable degrees of stigma. The World Federation of Neurology (WFN) has initiated and continues to promote the concept of brain health, which has a wide range of inclusion and is best summarized in the World Health Organization paper (World Health Organization, 2022a). This concept is embedded in the Intersectoral Global Action Plan (IGAP) (World Health Organization, 2022b), which created a global tool to promote neurology, and the WFN is using this tool for the 2023 World Brain Day to promote and introduce the concept of disability.
Volume
451
First Page
120720
Last Page
120720
ISSN
1878-5883
Published In/Presented At
Wijeratne, T., Dodick, D. W., Lewis, S. L., Guekht, A., Pochigaeva, K., & Grisold, W. (2023). World Brain Day 2023 - Brain Health and Disability: "Leave no one behind". Journal of the neurological sciences, 451, 120720. Advance online publication. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jns.2023.120720
PubMedID
37421882
Department(s)
Department of Medicine
Document Type
Article