Therapy Plan for Brain Injury
Acquired brain injury (ABI) — whether from trauma, stroke, infection, or other causes — can affect virtually every aspect of a person's functioning, including movement, speech, cognition, emotions, and behaviour. Recovery is most rapid in the first 6-18 months, but meaningful improvement can continue for years with the right therapy. A comprehensive, intensive rehabilitation approach that addresses physical, cognitive, communication, and emotional needs simultaneously produces the best outcomes. Every brain injury is unique, and therapy plans must be individualized based on the specific areas affected.
Recommended Therapies at a Glance
| Therapy | Priority | Best Ages | Frequency | Funded? |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Physiotherapy | Essential | All ages | 3-5 sessions/week (acute), 1-3/week (ongoing) | Yes |
| Occupational Therapy | Essential | All ages | 3-5 sessions/week (acute), 1-2/week (ongoing) | Yes |
| Speech Therapy | Essential | All ages | 3-5 sessions/week (acute), 1-2/week (ongoing) | Yes |
| CBT | Essential | 8+ years | 1-2 sessions/week | Yes |
| ADL Training | Recommended | All ages | 2-3 sessions/week (rehab phase) | Yes |
| Family Therapy | Recommended | All ages | Biweekly to monthly | Yes |
| Peer Mentoring | Recommended | 12+ years | Biweekly to monthly | Varies |
| Music Therapy | Beneficial | All ages | 1-2 sessions/week | Varies |
| Art Therapy | Beneficial | All ages | 1 session/week | Varies |
| Supported Employment | Beneficial | 18+ years | As needed | Yes |
Acute Recovery (0-6 months)
The early months are intense, but every small step forward matters. Your loved one's brain is working hard to heal, and intensive therapy during this window can make a lasting difference.
Essential Therapies
Introduce at This Stage
Sample Weekly Schedule
| Day | Activity | Duration |
|---|---|---|
| Monday-Friday | Physiotherapy (mobility, strength, balance) | 45-60 min daily |
| Monday-Friday | Occupational therapy (self-care, cognition) | 45-60 min daily |
| Monday-Friday | Speech-language therapy (communication, swallowing) | 30-45 min daily |
| 2x/week | Neuropsychology / CBT (as cognitive ability allows) | 30-50 min |
This phase typically occurs in hospital and inpatient rehabilitation. Therapy is intensive — often 3-5 hours per day. Family members should attend therapy sessions when possible to learn techniques they can use during non-therapy hours. Rest is equally important; the brain heals during sleep. Be patient with progress — recovery after brain injury is rarely linear. Keep a journal to track improvements that might not be obvious day to day.
Rehabilitation Phase (6-18 months)
Recovery continues beyond the hospital. Outpatient and community-based rehabilitation builds on early gains and helps translate therapy skills into real-world function.
Essential Therapies
Introduce at This Stage
Sample Weekly Schedule
| Day | Activity | Duration |
|---|---|---|
| Monday | Physiotherapy | 60 min |
| Tuesday | Occupational therapy (ADL focus) | 60 min |
| Wednesday | Speech-language therapy | 45 min |
| Thursday | CBT / neuropsychological therapy | 50 min |
| Friday | Music therapy or art therapy | 60 min |
| Biweekly | Family therapy | 50 min |
Transition from inpatient to outpatient rehabilitation can feel like a cliff — services drop significantly. Advocate for continued intensity. Address cognitive challenges such as memory, attention, planning, and impulse control through both OT and neuropsychology. Emotional and behavioural changes are common after brain injury — family therapy helps the whole family adapt. Begin driving assessment process if return to driving is a goal. Apply for provincial brain injury funding programs.
Community Reintegration (1-3 years)
Returning to community life — work, school, social activities — is the ultimate goal of rehabilitation. This stage takes patience and creative problem-solving, but every step toward participation matters.
Essential Therapies
Introduce at This Stage
Sample Weekly Schedule
| Day | Activity | Duration |
|---|---|---|
| Monday | Occupational therapy (community skills) | 60 min |
| Wednesday | CBT (adjustment, self-awareness) | 50 min |
| Thursday | Supported employment or vocational rehabilitation | As needed |
| Friday | Social recreation or peer mentoring | 60-90 min |
| As needed | Speech therapy (maintenance or new goals) | 45 min |
This is often the most emotionally challenging phase, as individuals become more aware of how their life has changed. Grief, frustration, and identity struggles are normal and should be addressed in therapy. Supported employment services help with return to work or exploring new career paths. Day programs and brain injury community groups provide structure and social connection. Self-awareness — understanding one's own strengths and limitations — is a key therapy goal at this stage.
Long-Term Management (3+ years)
Recovery does not have an expiration date. Many people with brain injuries continue to make meaningful gains years after their injury with the right support and strategies.
Essential Therapies
Sample Weekly Schedule
| Day | Activity | Duration |
|---|---|---|
| Weekly | CBT or counselling | 50 min |
| Weekly | Physical activity program (gym, pool, adapted sport) | 60 min |
| Biweekly | Peer support group | 60-90 min |
| As needed | OT booster sessions (life transitions, new challenges) | 45-60 min |
Long-term supports should focus on maintaining gains, preventing secondary complications (depression, social isolation, physical deconditioning), and adapting to life changes. Brain injury community programs, peer support, and social recreation become the backbone of ongoing support. Review medications periodically — some post-injury medications are no longer needed years later. Plan for aging with a brain injury, as cognitive and physical challenges may increase earlier than for the general population.
Build Your Therapy Team
Physiatrist (Rehabilitation Physician)
Coordinates medical rehabilitation, manages spasticity, pain, and medications, and oversees the transition from acute care to community living. The medical lead of the rehabilitation team.
Neuropsychologist
Assesses cognitive function (memory, attention, executive function, processing speed), provides cognitive rehabilitation, and guides return-to-work or school planning based on detailed testing.
Speech-Language Pathologist
Addresses communication (aphasia, dysarthria, cognitive-communication), swallowing difficulties, and social communication skills. May also work on voice and reading/writing.
Occupational Therapist
Focuses on returning to daily activities, cognitive strategies for real-world tasks, home modifications, driving assessment, and adaptive equipment for independence.
Social Worker / Case Manager
Navigates the complex web of funding, insurance, housing, disability benefits, and community services. Provides emotional support and helps families adjust to new realities.
Coordination Tips
- Request a team conference at discharge from inpatient rehabilitation — ensure every provider understands the outpatient plan and there are no gaps in service.
- Designate one person (often a social worker or case manager) as the care coordinator who maintains the master list of all providers, appointments, and goals.
- Share neuropsychological assessment results with the entire team — these findings guide cognitive accommodations across physiotherapy, OT, speech therapy, and vocational rehabilitation.
- Track functional gains (not just impairment measures) and celebrate progress. A journal or video diary of milestones helps everyone see improvement that happens gradually.
- Connect with your provincial brain injury association early. They offer peer support, system navigation, and often know about funding sources that clinical teams may not be aware of.
Annual Cost Estimate
These are theoretical maximums if paying fully out-of-pocket for private therapy. In practice, most families combine public services, provincial funding, insurance, and tax credits — and focus on the 2-3 therapies with the most evidence for their situation.
Essential Only
$15,000 - $30,000
1-2 core therapies (private rates)
Full Program
$35,000 - $60,000
All therapies at private rates — rarely needed
Realistic Out-of-Pocket
$8,000 - $20,000
With public services, provincial funding + tax credits
How to Reduce Therapy Costs
- Most families focus on 2-3 core therapies, not all of them. Prioritize based on what has the biggest impact right now.
- Many therapies are available free through the public system — schools, children's treatment centres, and community health centres provide speech, OT, and physio at no cost (though waitlists can be long).
- Provincial autism/disability programs often cover the most expensive therapies — apply immediately after diagnosis, as waitlists can be 1-2 years.
- University and college clinics offer supervised therapy sessions at 40-60% below private rates.
- Group therapy sessions are typically 30-50% cheaper than individual sessions and provide additional social benefits.
- All therapy costs can be claimed on the Medical Expense Tax Credit (METC, line 33099) — this includes travel costs over 40km to appointments.
- The Disability Tax Credit (DTC) unlocks the Child Disability Benefit ($3,411/year) which can directly offset therapy costs.
- Employer benefits plans may cover therapy — many now include speech, OT, and psychology with $500-2,000/year limits.
Questions to Ask a New Therapist
- 1What are the qualifications and experience with this specific condition?
- 2What does a typical session look like, and how do participants and families get involved?
- 3How is progress measured, and how often are updates shared?
- 4How long before meaningful improvement is typically expected?
- 5Is there coordination with other therapists and the school team?
- 6What can be done at home to reinforce what is worked on in sessions?
- 7What is the cancellation policy, and are makeup sessions offered?
- 8Is direct billing available through insurance providers?
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