UK charities and care support for people with brain injuries
Answer
The UK has several well-established charities and care providers supporting people with brain injuries, ranging from national organisations to regional specialist services. Key charities include Headway (adults), Child Brain Injury Trust (children/families), and The Brain Charity, alongside private care providers like Agincare offering clinical rehabilitation support.
Key Findings
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Headway (headway.org.uk) is the UK’s leading brain injury charity for adults — offers a free helpline: 0808 800 2244, local groups, online community (HealthUnlocked), and extensive information on all brain injury types including TBI, stroke, and aneurysm.
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Child Brain Injury Trust (childbraininjurytrust.org.uk) focuses on childhood acquired brain injury — provides ABI Coordinators, family counselling, sibling resources, legal support service, and small grants (‘Give a Child a Chance’); referrals accepted from professionals and families.
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After Matters (aftermatters.org.uk) supports young people aged 16–25 with ABI in Greater Manchester — offers a confidential helpline, peer support, and modest grants of £50–£500 for therapy, equipment, or vocational rehabilitation.
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The Brain Charity (thebraincharity.org.uk) provides wider neurological condition support including brain injury — based in Liverpool but offers national resources.
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Agincare (agincare.com) is a regulated private care provider (CQC-registered) offering ABI rehabilitation through live-in care, home care visits, and care/nursing homes — bespoke care plans covering physical, emotional, and complex needs.
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Trustpilot ratings for specialist providers (Neuro Injury Specialists, Accomplish Group, Stroke & Physiotherapy) were inaccessible during this research — independent reviews not confirmed.
Open Questions
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What are the waiting times and eligibility criteria for NHS-funded neurorehabilitation vs. charity-funded support, and how do people navigate the transition from hospital to community care?
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Which UK brain injury charities or care providers have the strongest evidence base or CQC ratings for long-term outcomes, particularly for severe TBI cases?
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Are there specific support gaps for underserved groups (e.g., older adults with ABI, rural populations, or those with co-occurring mental health conditions) that charities are currently failing to address?
Entities
headway child-brain-injury-trust after-matters the-brain-charity agincare bush-co---kids-case-management give-as-you-live
Concepts
acquired-brain-injury-support charity-helpline-services early-intervention-coordination community-inclusion-programmes vocational-rehabilitation-grants live-in-and-home-care-provision professional-and-family-education
Sources
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https://www.trustpilot.com/review/neuroinjuryspecialists.com
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https://www.trustpilot.com/review/www.strokeandphysiotherapy.co.uk
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https://www.trustpilot.com/review/neurodisabilitynetwork.co.uk?page=2
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https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0277953696003450
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https://www.cdc.gov/traumatic-brain-injury/response/get-help.html
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https://www.facebook.com/groups/colchester.community/posts/4540732869586801/
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https://www.facebook.com/groups/595992884211831/posts/2166424660501971/