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Health / Traumatic brain injury / Randomized controlled trial / Prospective memory / Pager / Technology / Neurotrauma / Medicine


There is insufficient evidence to support that personal digital assistant devices improve task performance in clients with memory impairment following a traumatic brain injury Prepared by: Date: Emma Tan (etan7224@uni.s
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Document Date: 2013-04-01 21:08:31


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File Size: 267,92 KB

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Company

Avery / Gillette / Wilson / Patient/Client Group / Medline / Brain Injury / Kendall / Siemens / /

Country

United Kingdom / /

Currency

pence / /

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Event

Person Communication and Meetings / /

Facility

Colman Centre / Cochrane library / /

IndustryTerm

pager systems / Search terms / personal digital assistant devices / handheld computer devices / search strategy / electronic search / Wireless communications / /

MedicalCondition

PDA / injury/time post injury / TBI / Brain Injury / Acquired Brain Injury / post injury / CLINICAL SCENARIO Traumatic Brain Injuries / traumatic brain injury / injury / memory loss / traumatic brain injuries / male Years Post Injury / /

MusicGroup

A Group / /

Organization

Colman Centre for Specialist Rehabilitation / Centre for Disease Control and Prevention / Centre for Evidence Based Medicine / /

Person

Tran Vu / Emma Tan / /

Position

Author / therapist / Personal digital assistant / researcher / lecturer / assistant / /

Technology

cellular telephone / paging system / Wireless communications / smart phones / PDA technology / personal digital assistant / paging / mobile phones / PDA / CAT / /

SocialTag