The TPS Journaling Space — May 2026 When the Survivor Becomes the Coordinator of Their Own Recovery After a serious road traffic accident, recovery may involve numerous professionals, organisations and appointments — hospital reviews, physiotherapy, pain management, psychological support, occupational health discussions, insurance correspondence and medico-legal assessments. On paper, this can appear to be aContinue reading “When the Survivor Becomes the Coordinator of Their Own Recovery”
Category Archives: May 2026
The Iceberg Effect: What Recovery Assessments May Not Immediately Reveal
The TPS Journaling Space — May 2026 The Iceberg Effect: What Recovery Assessments May Not Immediately Reveal After a serious road traffic accident, the most visible injuries naturally receive the greatest attention. Broken bones, surgical wounds, mobility restrictions and physical pain can be examined, recorded and monitored. But long-term recovery is not always fully visible.Continue reading “The Iceberg Effect: What Recovery Assessments May Not Immediately Reveal”
How Owns Recovery After Hospital Discharge
The TPS Journaling Space — May 2026 Who Owns Recovery After Hospital Discharge? Leaving hospital is often treated as a major milestone after a serious road traffic accident — the moment when immediate danger has passed and recovery can continue at home. But discharge can also mark the beginning of a far less structured stage.Continue reading “How Owns Recovery After Hospital Discharge”