How to use PHINE
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- Useful links
- Lifestyle and Behaviour
- Population Groups
- Health and Disease Groups
- Determinants of Health
- Long Term Conditions
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Neurology
A long-term neurological condition results from disease of, injury or damage to the body’s nervous system (ie the brain, spinal cord and/or their peripheral nerve connections) which will affect the individual and their family in one way or another for the rest of their life. There is a wide variety of long-term neurological conditions and people have very different experiences. Conditions may be present at birth (eg cerebral palsy) and some of these may be associated with varying degrees of learning disability. Other conditions appear in childhood (eg muscular dystrophy) or develop during adulthood (eg Parkinson’s disease).
The Long-term (Neurological) Conditions National Service Framework (NSF) was launched in March 2005. The NSF aims to transform the way health and social care services support people to live with long-term neurological conditions. Key themes are independent living, care planned around the needs and choices of the individual, easier, timely access to services and joint working across all agencies and disciplines involved. The principles of the NSF are also relevant to service development for other long-term conditions.
