
“Understanding grows in the space between where you are and what comes next”
Across the final quarter of 2025, TPS has continued to grow its body of insight and practitioner-facing resources focused on long-term recovery following road traffic accidents (RTA).
TPS Blogs in this last quarter, explored key themes shaping recovery after RTA, including identity change, long-term adjustment after discharge, post-acute continuity gaps, and governance considerations in recovery pathways. These articles are intended to support reflection, system-level understanding, and informed discussion around the longer-term impact of trauma. You can explore the full blog series on the TPS blog.



During the same period, we introduced an expanding set of clinical practitioner resources to support professionals working within post-acute RTA recovery. These resources were developed in response to the recognised gap between discharge and longer-term recovery, offering structured insight into predictable deterioration risk, outcome visibility beyond formal care, and the impact of fragmented accountability. They are designed to support clinical reasoning, service planning, and governance discussions rather than replace existing care pathways.
The Toolkit Library has also continued to expand, with the release of Toolkits 6, 7, 8, and 9. These toolkits focus on practical areas of longer-term recovery and self-management following RTA, supporting individuals and services with structured guidance around emotional recovery, daily functioning, pacing, and ongoing adjustment beyond the acute phase.


These developments are brought together in our latest quarterly newsletter, The Shift, which provides an overview of recent TPS activity, new resources, and programme progress across the quarter. The newsletter also highlights key updates, tools, and areas of focus as TPS continues to develop.