“Somewhere along the line, your mask isn’t going to be fitting right”: institutional racism in Black narratives of traumatic brain injury rehabilitation across the practice continuum
PMCID: PMC11270842
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Abstract
Background Over two decades of research about traumatic brain injury (TBI) rehabilitation emphasized the persistence of racial health disparities in functional outcomes that disproportionately impact Black populations without naming or addressing racism as the root problem. Further, the experiences of Black people with TBI have yet to be documented and accounted for in scientific scholarship from the perspectives of Black persons in Canada. Purpose This study intended to examine the rehabilitation narratives of Black TBI survivors, family caregivers, and rehabilitation providers and use critical race theory as a conceptual framework to understand how anti-Black racism manifests in those experiences. Methods Through critical narrative inquiry informed by a critical constructivist paradigm and a critical race theory lens, in-depth narrative interviewing were conducted with seven survivors, three family caregivers, and four rehabilitation providers. Data were analyzed using reflexive thematic analysis within and across groups of participants to conceptualize themes and sub-themes. Findings Themes captured how racism becomes institutionalized in TBI rehabilitation: (1) the institutional construction of deficient Black bodies, (2) the institutional construction of rehabilitation access, (3) the institutional investment in resisting and approximating whiteness in rehabilitation practice, and (4) the institutional construction of deficient Black futures. Conclusion Study findings point to the dire need to ensure rehabilitation programs, services, and the delivery of care are not determined based on inequitable practices, racial biases and assumptions about Black people, which determine who deserves to get into rehabilitation and have opportunities to be supported in working towards living a full and meaningful life. Supplementary Information The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1186/s12913-024-10986-1.
Full Text
Traumatic brain injury (TBI) can be described as a chronic disease process that often leads to permanent and persistent challenges to physical, cognitive, and psychological functioning, which require a long strenuous course of rehabilitation [1]. Although TBI can impact any individual, some groups of people, such as Black populations, have a higher likelihood of sustaining injury [2–4] and living with the long-term impacts [5]. Despite the importance of rehabilitation, Black people living with the consequences of TBI not only lack access to rehabilitation services [6–11]; they also experience poor functional outcomes [12] and challenges with community integration [13–16] compared to White populations and other racial minorities. The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) recognized racism as a critical contributor to racial health disparities and expressed a commitment to address the social and structural conditions that bring about these forms of inequities [17]. In the institution of TBI rehabilitation practice, this raises a critical question, “how is racism operating here?” [18].
Considering the mechanisms in which racial disparities persist draws attention to the impacts of institutional racism [18]. Better [19] defines institutional racism as the “patterns, procedures, practices, and policies” that function within institutions to intentionally “penalize, disadvantage, and exploit” racialized persons (p.11). For example, several rehabilitation clinical practice guidelines have been created to inform practice for persons with TBI using the most up-to-date evidence-based research, which provides recommendations for rehabilitation professionals and healthcare providers to promote optimal functioning and recovery post-injury [20, 21]. One form of scientific evidence that can be used to inform these practice guidelines is the first-hand rehabilitation experiences of persons with TBI, which predominately give insight into the organization of rehabilitation services [22], effectiveness of programs [23, 24] perceptions and experiences about the rehabilitation process [25–27], transition into the community [28, 29], gendered [30, 31] and cultural experiences of rehabilitation [32], and service needs [33]. One of the ways in which institutional racism operates is through the silencing and erasure of the experiences of Black people with TBI. Existing qualitative studies provide limited insight into the experiences of Black and other racialized persons with TBI. While literature reports that racial health disparities disproportionately impact Black people with TBI, such qualitative studies either exclude race data in the demographics or aggregate the data to present a collective narrative that tells the story of the TBI rehabilitation journey as though it is a universal one.
In 2020, the Public Health Agency of Canada (PHAC) released the Social Determinants and Inequities in Health for Black Canadians snapshot documenting anti-Black racism as a determinant of health outcomes and a pertinent factor in health and institutional disparities [34]. In a recent scoping review, Omar et al. [35] examined the clinical journey of Black TBI patients to understand better what is known about the care continuum for this population. Amongst many important findings from this review, the most striking was how racism was identified as a normalized practice in research and one that largely remained unnamed but, in some instances, was referred to in other terms such as racial bias, prejudice, and systemic barriers which are considered as components of racism [35] However, the need to examine the first-hand experience of Black persons with TBI, how racism manifests in rehabilitation institutions, and the outcomes for Black persons with TBI remain.
To date, the TBI rehabilitation literature that considers Black populations has primarily focused on documenting racial health disparities in recovery and functional outcomes using methodological approaches driven by positivist paradigms based on decontextualized knowledge that leaves out the contextual reality of Black lives. The findings from these studies suggest that some rehabilitation institutions fail to fulfill their stated purpose of supporting optimal functioning at home and in communities. Critical qualitative health research has the potential to illuminate the fundamental mechanisms that contribute to differential outcomes in the everyday lives of people who experience social injustice daily [36]. As such, an analysis of the rehabilitation experiences across different institutional spaces across the continuum of care is vital in identifying how institutional racism shows up in practice. Using a critical approach can suggest where researchers, rehabilitation professionals, educators, and policymakers can intervene to dismantle the institutionalized practices that contribute to poor outcomes and limited life opportunities for Black people with TBI. Therefore, this study addresses the following research question using critical race theory (CRT) to foreground institutional racism: What do the stories of Black survivors of TBI, their family caregivers, and rehabilitation providers tell us about how racism manifests in rehabilitation?
This study used a constructivist-informed narrative inquiry [37, 38]. Narrative inquiry provides a window into understanding the experiences of participants and the meanings they attach to those experiences as, "story makes the implicit explicit, the hidden seen, the unformed formed, and the confusing clear" ([39], p.196). This design aligned with the lead investigators' constructivist worldview such that humans carry themselves through the world through storytelling, which provides richness and depth into the multiple lived realities of the participants and how they make sense of those realities [38, 40]. Using a constructivist paradigm allowed the researchers to understand and explore the multiple realities experienced by the participants. Constructivists adhere to a relativist position, meaning they do not believe in one truth but in multiple and equally acceptable subjective realities that differ from one individual to another [41]. Operating from this paradigm also meant that the relationship between the researcher and the participants were transactional, meaning that the findings from the study emerged from knowledge co-constructed by the investigator and the participants [41, 42]. The co-constructive nature of narrative inquiry allows for unique insights into participants' experiences and enables researchers and clinicians to understand how care can be improved [38, 43]. Riessman [38] acknowledges that the stories people live and tell happen in a particular context and are situated historically, socially, and politically, thus, they must be understood within prevalent discourses and power relations. As such, CRT is used as a conceptual framework to understand the rehabilitation narratives of the participants in this study. This methodological bricolage is known to examine the experiences of people who have been marginalized, silenced, and disempowered [44]. This study was approved by the Research Ethics Board at the University of Toronto (protocol # 40525). This manuscript was prepared using the consolidated criteria for reporting qualitative research (COREQ) checklist [45].
This study was situated in a CRT lens which is a framework that provides opportunities to examine pertinent issues of race and racism by considering the role of institutions by drawing on the experiences of groups of people who are deeply impacted [44]. CRT proceeds with an understanding that although institutional racism is less visible than individual forms of racist actions, the effects can be more harmful as they require change beyond an individual and establish the norms that govern institutions and organizations. CRT emerged in the mid 1970’s to address the impacts of race and racism in the U.S. judicial system [46, 47]. There are five basic CRT tenets that are widely used by theorists. First, racism is a pervasive feature of society that operates through colourblind ideologies that evade race and its contributions to treatment and outcomes [48–50]. Colourblindness is based on the belief that the racial group to which one belongs and any differences based on race should not be considered in decisions [48–50]. Second, race is a social construction, a product of social and political ideas that influence how people relate to one another [49]. This means that race is not biological; instead, it is a social classification system created by humans [49]. Third, whiteness is a form of property that grants White people a set of privileges based on their identity [51]. Fourth, the concept of interest convergence explains that any progress that is made to address racial health disparities, will happen as long as it benefits the dominant majority, which is White people [49]. Fifth, taking action on systemic racism requires counternarratives to the deficit narratives typically represented in research and practice [44, 49]. Based on these five tenants, CRT serves as a suitable framework to examine the impact of race and racism in the institution of rehabilitation facilities for Black people with TBI. These manifestations of these CRT tenants and concepts are described in more detail in reporting the qualitative findings and are further elaborated in the discussion section.
Participants were recruited using purposeful sampling [52] to find Black survivors of TBI, family caregivers, and rehabilitation providers who had knowledge and experience with TBI rehabilitation in a Canadian context. This involved directly approaching organizations and spaces which have people who have knowledge about the scope of the study. Snowball sampling was also employed by asking those recruited who reached out to share the study information with other potential participants such as family, friends, and co-workers who meet the criteria to participate [53]. Survivors of TBI and their family caregivers learned of the study through rehabilitation providers in their circle of care who facilitated recruitment by informing potential participants of the study. Recruitment flyers and messages were shared on Twitter including announcements made in newsletters from local and national brain injury and rehabilitation organizations. Rehabilitation providers were informed about the study through local brain injury and rehabilitation organizations across Canada, professional practice associations who shared recruitment flyers through weekly newsletters and emails to members, and on Twitter.
All persons were required to self-identify as Black or someone from the African diaspora, communicate in English, and be consenting adults capable of providing informed consent to participate in the study. Table 1 provides a summary of the inclusion criteria for all categories of participants. Information about TBI was gathered using the OHIO State University Traumatic Brain Injury Identification Method (OSU TBI-ID) which captures details about their injuries and history [54]. Interested participants contacted the first author, who provided detailed information about the study and confirmed their eligibility. All participants were emailed a research package including consent forms, interview questions, and instructions on connecting virtually using the Zoom platform. Informed consent was obtained from all participants before the start of their interview. Providing questions ahead of time was important to help address the power differentials in the research and to empower participants by informing them of what they will be asked as well as giving them the necessary support.
Demographic information was collected from all participants at the beginning of the first interviews including self-identified ethnicity, racial identity, age, place of birth, gender identity, religious practice, marital status, level of education, place of residence, place of employment, and household income. Specially for persons with TBI, demographic questions were asked about their injury, satisfaction with rehabilitation, the kinds of services they received, and how they paid for these services. Family caregivers and rehabilitation providers were asked similar questions from their perspective. As outlined by Bertaux and Kholi [55], two-step narrative interviewing (e.g., extensive narrative and a period of questioning) was used as the primary method to co-construct narratives with the participants as a form of data. This required creating an environment that enabled active listening and probing about participant narratives. The first author led these narrative interviews and conducted them virtually in a private office at the University of Toronto. Interviews with persons with TBI were spread across three days as part of the empathetic interviewer-participant relationship [56]. One survivor attended the interview with a family caregiver and rehabilitation provider present. At the beginning of the interview, all participants were reminded of the goal of the study to provide context to the interview questions they were asked. The primary question was, "can you please tell me in as much detail as you can your story of what it is like to be a Black man or woman who is living with a traumatic brain injury and your experiences with rehabilitation?" This was followed by a series of open-ended questions that explored participants' narratives based on their responses to the first question and others related to their identities and experiences in rehabilitation. An example of the interview guide used for survivors of TBI can be found in supplementary materials (Additional file 1). Family caregivers and rehabilitation providers where asked similar questions related to their perspective. The second interview, which occurred between one and three weeks apart from the first, was used to probe the experiences that participants shared in their first interviews. At the end of the second interview, all participants were asked, “what is the final message you wanted to get to me about the Black experience in this space?” In total, fourteen participants (ten women and four men) were interviewed, and each interview lasted, on average, between 60 to 90 minutes and were audio-recorded. The final sample size was nuanced and rich in data to capturing similarities, nuances, contradictions, and tensions among the amount of detail that participants provided about their experiences of being Black in TBI rehabilitation [57, 58].
Data were analyzed in this study using reflexive thematic analysis [59–61] and informed by CRT. Reflexive thematic analysis serves to identify patterns and themes within and across participant’s narratives of their rehabilitation experiences. Reflexive thematic analysis was chosen due to its (a) alignment with the methodological approach of narrative inquiry and the goal of identifying common patterns, ideas, and themes across the transcripts while staying close to participants’ own words; (b) theoretical flexibility to bring in paradigmatic and epistemological positions aligned with the study design; and (c) suitability for applied health research with social justice implications for practice [61, 62]. Reflexive thematic analysis was used inductively in this study which means that analysis of narrative interviews was grounded in the data [61].
The steps taken to conduct this analysis were guided by Braun and Clarke’s [59, 61] guidelines for using thematic analysis. This analysis was focused on showing how racism becomes an institutionalized practice in TBI rehabilitation. The audio-recordings of the interviews were transcribed verbatim by a professional transcriptionist. Data familiarization was undertaken by the first author who re-listened to all the audio-recordings of the interviews and did multiple and iterative readings of the transcripts. This step involved writing reflexive notes about common patterns and differences, contradictions, and tensions amongst and across the different interview transcripts. As transcripts were read, initial codes were written alongside the margins of transcripts. Open coding was used to generate initial codes using analytical strategies such as asking questions of the data in line with CRT and the focus the study. Visual diagrams of the codes and patterns of the data were created at the beginning to get a more global sense of the generated codes. Weekly meetings were held with the research team to discuss identified codes, patterns, and reflections that were developed during the analysis process. This was an iterative process which involved hand drawn visual schemas where the first author moved back and forth between different phases of analysis outlined in Braun and Clarke [59, 61] until the story being told about the data became clearer. Once preliminary themes were identified and codes were refined, the first author then transferred all data onto NVivo 12 where the transcripts of rehabilitation providers and family caregivers were also coded separately using the identified pre-liminary themes and codes from the survivor transcripts. Given the unexplored nature of these voices, overarching themes were developed with the entire dataset in mind [59, 61]. A final thematic diagram was produced and continuously modified during the writing stage to demonstrate the relationship between the themes and the findings. All steps of the coding and theme development were thoroughly documented to ensure rigor and trustworthiness.
Finlay [62] defines reflexivity as a "thoughtful, conscious self-awareness in research" (p.532) through an ongoing and dynamic evaluation of the research process and the subjective nature of doing qualitative research. Researcher subjectivity was considered an integral resource in this study, and reflexivity was integrated as part of the dynamic of the research team and the co-construction of knowledge throughout the process [61]. For example, during the interviews, this guided the lead authors’ judgement in how to respond to participants and the types of experiences to probe. The researchers in this study came in with a conscious awareness of how Black people have been exploited and harmed historically in research studies. An integral part of co-constructing knowledge with the participants involved the lead researcher sharing her insider knowledge. As a researcher, it was important for her to be immersed in the research and share with participants how she related to this work to build trust, which led to the kinds of stories shared in the interviews [63, 64]. This trust was built before starting the interviews and as part of the informed consent process where the lead researcher was explicit about the intentions behind doing this study, how she related to the participants, how their data was going to be stored and used, and the confidentiality of their identities. Building rapport with the participants led to the production of richer data which allowed participants to enter into a space where they could share these profound experiences more easily [65].
The research team is composed of individuals with diverse disciplinary backgrounds and methodological experiences, which shaped the study design, execution of the interviews, and data analysis. Members of the research team engaged in collective and one-on-one meetings with the lead researcher throughout the research process. The lead researcher documented the tensions between navigating insider and outsider perspectives, the power dynamics at play, and how this influenced the co-construction of knowledge with the research team in her reflexive journal. In this journal, she also recorded insights, comments, conversations, and emotions that emerged and evolved throughout the research process. Before, during, and after interviews, she wrote personal reflexive observations about how her insider and outsider perspectives shaped and influenced the research process (e.g., research-participant relationship and interactions). Methodological reflexivity was also practiced, where the researchers played particular attention to why decisions were made around the nuances of choosing an approach to analysis (e.g., reflexive thematic analysis vs narrative analysis), using a conceptual framework, selecting particular quotes, explaining the context surrounding the quotes, and how these aligned with the nature of co-constructing knowledge to ensure research rigor and ethical considerations [66, 67].
Methodological rigor and trustworthiness of the findings were maintained through various criteria outlined in Tracy [67] and described below. Triangulation of data [68] was used in two different ways in this study, including through the various approaches to collecting data such as demographic questionnaires and narrative interviews and through the triangulation of different study participant perspectives, such as persons with TBI across the spectrum of injury, family caregivers, and various rehabilitation providers. Investigator triangulation was used to minimize the potential bias of only having one person code, gather, and analyze the data [68]. The divergent viewpoints of members of the research team were used to cross-check and verify the interpretation of data by other members of the research team through regular discussions and meetings. Periodic peer debriefing [69] with critical friends such as the doctoral supervisors, committee members, and knowledgeable qualitative health researchers was used to mitigate the different ways the researcher influenced the research process. As part of peer debriefing, the first author engaged in regular meetings with critical friends before and after interviews to share, discuss and challenge ideas throughout the analysis and writing process. Prolonged engagement and immersion with the data through data collection and analysis [70, 71] was applied, and through this, the first author spent long periods with participants to build rapport which led participants to open up more during the interviews. Reflexive notes were recorded throughout the process. The audit trail was maintained through different stages of the research process, including the conception of the study, generation of codes, construction of themes, questions raised about the connection between themes and codes, and tensions and contradictions raised amongst different participant experiences. Lastly, the credibility of the results was established through thick descriptions using detailed quotes.
A total of seven survivors of TBI, three family caregivers, and four rehabilitation providers across the province of Ontario participated in this study. Table 2 provides the socio-demographic characteristics for all participants. Of the sample of survivors, most identified as sustaining moderate to severe TBI (57%) and were of ages ranging from 19 to 52 with an average age of 35. 3 ± 9.4 years. Time since injury of the most recent TBI ranged from as little as one year to 17 years since the most recent TBI. Information about sex (e.g., male and female) was collected. However, participant gender is only reported in the demographic table. Women made up 57% of the sample of persons with TBI. A total of 29% of these participants sustained their injury through motor-vehicle collisions, another 29% through bike accidents, and one through an assault. Two individuals sustained their injuries during the COVID-19 pandemic, and all persons with TBI were currently receiving some form of rehabilitation for their injury (See Table 3 for injury characteristics). There were three family caregivers who identified as women, with an average age of 45.7 ± 4.5 years and spent an average of 3.3 years caregiving for their loved ones. Two were caregivers to their children with TBI (son and daughter) and one was a caregiver for her husband. Lastly, two physiotherapists, one occupational therapist, and one social worker participated. About 75% of the rehabilitation therapists were women, with an average age of 47 ± 13.1 years. Years of experience ranged from as little as five years of experience to over 30 years. Table 4 provides more information about the practice settings and years of experience for caregivers and rehabilitation providers.
It is important to note that the knowledge produced in these findings were co-constructed between the researcher and participants during the narrative interviews. In the reporting of the findings, the reader will be hearing from the participants but also from the lead investigator as she brings forward the process, she was in with co-constructing these narratives. Four themes and eight sub-themes were conceptualized, describing how racism becomes institutionalized in Black experiences of TBI rehabilitation. Figure 1 depicts a pictorial representation of the relationship between the conceptualized themes and CRT ideas. The themes revealed that racism becomes institutionalized in the practices, procedures, and policies perpetuated and upheld through rehabilitation providers in four different ways: (1) the institutional construction of deficient Black bodies, (2) the institutional construction of rehabilitation access, (3) the institutional investments in resisting and approximating whiteness in rehabilitation practice, and (4) the institutional construction of deficient Black futures. Below, these findings are presented.
This rehabilitation therapist expressed her concerns that all Black male TBI patients are always referred to as violent the moment they present behavioural problems related to their brain injury. These are the kinds of stereotypes that are portrayed about Black men as inherently being criminals and dangerous which reinforces their criminalization [72]. As illustrated in the extract above, when the rehabilitation provider states, “…he's in a rehab setting that supposedly deals with brain injury but they still didn't get it. You don't have a million people going through somebody's room with all different ways of working with him and expect him to be OK…”, other members of the rehabilitation team did not follow protocol and actually work to help the individual defuse the behavioural outputs in a manner that was appropriate for someone with a TBI, particularly someone who was assaulted. By rushing into his room in large numbers, this could re-traumatize and trigger the patient. The rehabilitation provider also indicated something important by revealing that she noticed his behaviour would get worse when he knew was under the care of other providers who would not treat him like a person suggesting that the behavioural outputs might be his way of communicating that he was in danger. From the reporting of these encounters, rather than taking the time to consider what triggers a Black TBI patient, rehabilitation therapists and other service providers would only consider the fact that a Black person with TBI is just a Black person and that all Black men are violent and aggressive. This suggests that Black TBI patients who are seen as being unmanageable and violent at their baseline are not seen as people who can benefit from rehabilitation and, therefore, will not be recommended for opportunities for recovery and regaining functioning. For the patient displayed in the example above, the clinical setting was so bad that he had to transition out of the hospital sooner as the space was no longer considered to be safe for him.
She described that she was expected to provide physical therapy to this White TBI patient despite his tendency to be violent and uttering death threats to other service providers about what he would do to her as a Black woman. The excerpt above also suggests that other service providers were aware of these narratives, but they were not documented in his medical records. By saying, "…are you sure you're not just being too touchy…" her boss made excuses that took the focus away from the White patient being violent and instead placed the blame on the Black woman provider, also implying that the behaviour is attributed to the brain injury and not him as a person. This illustrates that whiteness affords White TBI patients a level of protection from the harmful implications of written narratives of violence and aggression, reinforcing who deserves rehabilitation. Some of the rehabilitation providers did not explain, rather they went right into showing the comparison knowing that as a Black woman whose been in this space, there was a shared understanding of the comparison being made. In the excerpt above, what is unspoken but was communicated as part of the encounter in the interview was that a comparison was being made here between what was happening with this patient and what would happen if the patient were Black which is a comparison that was similarly expressed by other female providers. Beyond the portrayal of Black TBI bodies as deficient, this also provides a window into how the bodies of Black women providers are disregarded and the lack of protection that they receive by not sharing this pertinent information including the employment discrimination [73, 74].
In the example above, the participant perceived that the social worker racially profiled this Black man and assumed prior deficiency in functioning attributed to his race through the line of questioning that was asked. This is similar to the body of literature which describes that Black people are labelled as having learning disabilities, lower IQs, are placed in special education classes, and have lowered school performance as a consequence of unscientific discourse [75, 76].
She was attempting to prove that because he is a Black man, he likely came from a family where the father was violent and abusive towards his mother which draws in the literature about the trope of absent Black fathers and their endangered sons [76, 77]. In the interview encounter, he described that the insurance company denied him treatment three times even though he was officially diagnosed with a TBI by his care team. What is particularly interesting about his experiences and those of all other survivor participants is how they were constantly denied access to rehabilitation funding and services which lead to declines in functional gains, rehabilitation progress, and poor emotional and psychological well-being. Survivors who were covered by insurance expressed that they would get poor quality care where the clinician would cancel an appointment, cut an appointment short, or continue to reschedule but billed for these sessions, which reduced their funding and in many other instances they described how they would be paying for services to get treatments that they did not believe they needed.
What is alarming and not surprising is how she self-advocates for herself in expressing the importance of meeting her rehabilitation goals to support her mental health but is ignored by her rehabilitation team. The participant perceived that the rehabilitation team pathologized her by over-emphasizing her mental illness without considering the physical and cognitive aftermaths of the TBI that she had to live with, which impacted her day-to-day functioning and mental well-being. This draws attention to other scholarship which have reported that Black people are more likely to be misdiagnosed for mental illness by White professionals [78] and similar to the ways in which Black patients’ pain levels are less likely to be taken seriously than White patients and other ethnic minorities [79]. This excerpt illustrates how the rehabilitation team made decisions on her behalf without even consulting with her and neglected her input, limiting her capacity to make decisions about her care and suggesting that they knew what was best for her, which was also seen in other interviews with survivor participants. The lack of attention to her physical limitations related to the TBI strained her mental health. In another part of her interview, she described how she attended a hospital-based mental health support group and was traumatized by the experience. This set her back months with her rehabilitation goals because she was exposed to other people’s problems that were overwhelming and detrimental to her mental health. In fact, the gate keeping of publicly funded rehabilitation services by weaponizing the need for mental health was a common occurrence in the narratives shared by some of the other survivors.
The excerpt above illustrates how this participant selected rehabilitation goals that he felt were appropriate by emphasizing that “… you've got to put your mask on. You've got to prepare yourself a certain way in order to rise up within the society that's created in that certain way….” The mask symbolized that whiteness holds value in rehabilitation and society, reinforcing that Blackness does not. For Black men who have to carry themselves in the world in ways that approximate whiteness as a survival mechanism, the cognitive and physical limitations accompanying TBI make it difficult to wear that "white mask." He uses the metaphor of a white mask [80] to describe how he attempted to approximate whiteness. This displayed his double consciousness [81] by showing how he concealed his true self which meant that he had one mind that he intended for white people to see and another that represented his true self as a Black man but his ability to do this was complicated by the cognitive sequelae related to the TBI. As part of this encounter, P13 described the difficulty in having to put on this “white mask” as a Black man with a TBI. He shared, “Because somewhere along the line, your mask isn’t going to be fitting right, you know what I’m trying to say? It’s not going to be fitting right because you got this going on in your brain and you’ve got a whole bunch of whatever chaos going on with your mind or whatever, and then you’ve got to put on [white mask]” (P13, Male, Survivor). He expressed that he operated in a way that approximated whiteness as that was the only option, he felt like he had to get to a place where he could have the best chance at participating in society. For Black men survivors of TBI, the pressures to approximate whiteness meant that they worked on rehabilitation goals that they believed helped them not "look like" they had a brain injury which meant that they focused on physical functioning and often neglected cognitive and psychosocial elements of their recovery. What is also important to note is how P13 expressed that "… you're putting in someone who I cannot relate to at all…" suggesting that the White clinician reinforces whiteness and the need to work on goals that assimilate in close proximity to whiteness. This suggests that perhaps working with a clinician of a similar background would allow for opportunities to connect and work on other goals such as addressing mental health and psychosocial functioning. This point of view was expressed by all the survivors.
CRT centers on the premise that racism is pervasive, an integral part of society, and the ordinary way institutions operate [48, 49] such as TBI rehabilitation. One mechanism of the ordinariness of racism is through practices and procedures that promote a false illusion of fair and equal treatment that instead function to perpetuate whiteness and maintain White supremacy in rehabilitation using ideologies such as colourblindness (e.g., neutrality) and meritocracy (e.g., hard work and merit) which minimize the significance of race. This is seen in participant narratives where they bring a race-conscious awareness to rehabilitation by using different strategies afforded by class privilege to resist whiteness and anti-Black racism and, in other instances, approximate whiteness to benefit from rehabilitation. Other literature has shown that racism and whiteness operate to provide White patients with more appropriate health care and that providers in medicine, nursing, and dentistry provide care informed by colourblind ideologues [82–84]. The findings from this study support this premise and provide important nuances relevant to a rehabilitation context.
An important finding is the use of the metaphor, "white mask," which was coined by Franz Fanon [80]. This metaphor referred to the kind of code-switching that happened for Black men with TBI where the white mask represented the need to assimilate to the norms and values of whiteness while in a rehabilitation context. In The Souls of Black Folk, CRT scholar Du Bois [81] used the term double consciousness to articulate "this sense of always looking at one's self through the eyes of others" (p.10-11). For instance, double consciousness was prevalent in survivors' narratives, demonstrating that they came into TBI rehabilitation and realized that to benefit from services offered and receive optimal care, they needed to operate in a way that approximated whiteness which was not only difficult but also had its consequences. This meant that Black men worked on rehabilitation goals that a White clinician could understand, like addressing physical functioning and neglecting cognitive and emotional well-being (e.g., mental health), which raised further challenges on their road to recovery. This may result in what is referred to as the 'burden of acting white hypothesis' seen in Black students across different academic settings leading to underachievement [85–88] raising critical questions about the types of goals rehabilitation providers recommend, encourage, and support. TBI rehabilitation must understand the costs of double consciousness and address efforts towards eliminating the need for Black patients to feel that they need to conform to a particular set of standards defined by race if the goal of rehabilitation is to maximize functioning and participation in daily activities for all people.
One of the hallmarks of CRT is the fact that race is a social construct with no biological basis and was created to legitimize the subordination of Black people and other racialized persons [89, 90]. For instance, the dominant narrative in research about race and TBI rehabilitation often portrays a deficit perspective about Black people, continuously describing them as experiencing worse outcomes across various measures compared to their White counterparts. This is seen in the institutional construction of deficient Black bodies. Our findings provide deeper insight into how deficient views operate in a rehabilitation context spotlighting essential nuances related to intersections of race and gender and the consequences. When Black men with TBI enter rehabilitation settings, rehabilitation professionals and other care providers treat their Blackness as the presenting problem rather than addressing the clinical manifestations of the injury. This is seen where Black men with TBI are labelled as aggressive, violent, and dangerous, unlike their White counterparts, which is similar to the kinds of dominant narratives perpetuated about Black men that have been well documented [91–94].
Similarly, Black women caregivers were labelled as being complicated and problematic when advocating and supporting their loved ones compared to White caregivers. This can be recognized as the trope of the angry Black woman stereotype which casts Black women as aggressive, ill-tempered, illogical, overbearing, hostile, and attitudinal [95, 96]. This reinforces the importance of considering race and gender in addressing these racist outcomes in rehabilitation practice. Addressing institutional racism should involve monitoring what kinds of narratives get documented about Black people with TBI and how this shapes referrals to rehabilitation services and programs.
Applying CRT brings our attention to the norms of whiteness and how it sets the standards [49], in this case, the ideal White patient and the problematic Black patient. Frankenberg [97] describes that the white racial frame makes whiteness normative and the unspoken standard by which all other people are judged and viewed. This white racial frame may account for why White TBI patients were tolerated and treated with dignity and Black TBI patients were treated as problematic unrelated to their injuries. These findings are significant as they suggest that rehabilitation can be a dangerous place for Black people with TBI, with gendered consequences as the white racial frame constructs Blackness as synonymous with criminality (e.g., narratives of violence, aggression, drug users, drug dealers) which reinforces racial profiling and becomes more dangerous the more significant the severity of the injury is and if the injury is sustained through mechanisms of violence. This can impact how Black TBI patients are orally presented during clinical meetings, the kinds of information shared about them, and the stories shared between service providers. In this way, other service providers may refuse to work with them and see them as problematic, leading to a domino effect which can result in discontinued rehabilitation, reduced hours in rehabilitation, lowered quality of care, unsuitable treatment options, and lack of referrals and recommendations for continued care. If those narratives get written into their medical records, then that becomes the story people tell about them, which means that opportunities for recovery and rehabilitation become limited.
One of the major tenets of CRT, which was crucial in understanding the cumulative impacts of institutional racism in TBI rehabilitation, is the tenet of whiteness as property which refers to rights based on whiteness [51] as illustrated in Fig. 1. One of these rights is the right to exclude [51], and meritocracy is one mechanism used to exclude Black people from TBI rehabilitation. In CRT, meritocracy, which allocates resources and opportunities, is inherently inequitable as it fails to account for the systems and institutions that exclude racialized people [49], and in this case, Black people with TBI. Meritocracy enables more White people to gain access to rehabilitation despite the illusion that access depends on funding, injury severity, and other objective criteria. However, meeting these merit-based requirements is increasingly difficult for Black people with TBI. It is important that rehabilitation institutions keep track of whether the number of Black people entering into rehabilitation programs and services is increasing or decreasing.
This study draws attention to how rehabilitation therapists gatekeep [98] services, resources, and knowledge at the level of both publicly funded services and through insurance companies in the province of Ontario. As similarly reported in previous studies [8, 9, 99], Black survivors in this sample overwhelmingly experienced challenges getting into rehabilitation where some have expressed waiting for many years, including up to a decade. These decisions are made at the professional discretion of the rehabilitation professional and their clinical reasoning. What is quite interesting is at the level of insurance companies where participants revealed how rehabilitation professionals used race as part of their assessments to determine whether or not Black TBI patients' injuries were worthy of rehabilitation which may also explain why Black patients with TBI have difficulty accessing rehabilitation even when covered by insurance [7, 11]. The literature has shown that Black people with TBI are less likely to get into rehabilitation even after controlling for injury severity and insurance status [99] and are more likely to get discharged home [9]. Although it is beyond the scope of this study to go into a lengthy discussion about ethical and clinical reasoning, it is important to mention that perhaps what underpins profession-specific rehabilitation models and theories may contribute to and reinforce the poor outcomes that disproportionately impact Black TBI patients in rehabilitation that warrant further investigation. Future researchers may also wish to consider examining the process of rehabilitation admittance through public and private services and identify the interplay between racially biased standardized questions and subjective questions spontaneously created by the assessor. Equally important is examining the intake process, clinical decision making, and what criteria rehabilitation professionals use to determine who gets into rehabilitation and who does not. Over time, rehabilitation institutions must monitor how the number of Black TBI patients in rehabilitation compare to the number of White patients.
One of the most demoralizing findings from this study is the construction of deficient Black futures, which illustrates a deeply rooted issue in society that impacts all Black people generally, specifically those with TBI which is seen even in the education system for Black people with TBI [100] and other Black students who are denied opportunities to learn and participate in academic life [101–103]. When rehabilitation providers neglect to ask questions about participation and community integration, disregard the need to provide necessary treatment, and differentially incorporate pertinent assessments, it reinforces rehabilitation as a property owned by and for the use of White patients and other White people. In this context of rehabilitation practice, whiteness as property refers to the fact that whiteness as an identity is the acceptable standard and norm that is depicted to be the beneficiary of rehabilitation support. This means that Black patients are not afforded the same rights in being supported in occupations, having opportunities to participate in community life and the rights to benefit from rehabilitation as their White counterparts. Rehabilitation institutions must audit the treatment plans of Black TBI patients in rehabilitation to monitor what kinds of recommendations, referrals, assessments, and goals Black patients are supported with which can also function as an accountability measure for how conscious and unconscious racialized beliefs about Black people’s worth and value in society contribute to lower expectations and the lack of investments in the futures of Black people with TBI.
What if rehabilitation practice made a conscious effort to invest in Black patients' futures? Future research may wish to examine what this could look like given the findings of this study. It is important to note that this does not mean that Black people with TBI do not benefit from rehabilitation, but that practices, procedures, and policies were not designed for their benefit. Rehabilitation professionals put less effort into thinking about the futures of their Black TBI patients by not engaging in discussions about how to support participation in vocation and other meaningful occupations, which appeared to be the standard treatment for all White patients. Further, economic privilege does not insulate Black survivors from the realities of not being seen as worthy enough to be considered for opportunities to engage in meaningful employment and other productive activities, including going to school and participating in community life. Similar to the participant narratives, other studies using different methodologies and based in the U.S. have shown that Black persons with TBI receive less intense treatment [10] and experience poor community integration and participation in productive activities [13–16, 104, 105]. Perhaps this is why Black people with TBI spend more time unemployed. Future research should consider important components needed in rehabilitation programs and services to dismantle whiteness (e.g., supporting alternative ways knowing, doing, and being) and support participation in daily life for Black survivors of TBI. This should also involve examining what discharge planning looks like for Black people and ensuring that they have connected supports when transitioning into the community.
Sections
"[{\"pmc\": \"PMC11270842\", \"pmid\": \"\", \"reference_ids\": [\"CR1\", \"CR2\", \"CR4\", \"CR5\", \"CR6\", \"CR11\", \"CR12\", \"CR13\", \"CR16\", \"CR17\", \"CR18\"], \"section\": \"Background\", \"text\": \"Traumatic brain injury (TBI) can be described as a chronic disease process that often leads to permanent and persistent challenges to physical, cognitive, and psychological functioning, which require a long strenuous course of rehabilitation [1]. Although TBI can impact any individual, some groups of people, such as Black populations, have a higher likelihood of sustaining injury [2\\u20134] and living with the long-term impacts [5]. Despite the importance of rehabilitation, Black people living with the consequences of TBI not only lack access to rehabilitation services [6\\u201311]; they also experience poor functional outcomes [12] and challenges with community integration [13\\u201316] compared to White populations and other racial minorities. The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) recognized racism as a critical contributor to racial health disparities and expressed a commitment to address the social and structural conditions that bring about these forms of inequities [17]. In the institution of TBI rehabilitation practice, this raises a critical question, \\u201chow is racism operating here?\\u201d [18].\"}, {\"pmc\": \"PMC11270842\", \"pmid\": \"\", \"reference_ids\": [\"CR18\", \"CR19\", \"CR20\", \"CR21\", \"CR22\", \"CR23\", \"CR24\", \"CR25\", \"CR27\", \"CR28\", \"CR29\", \"CR30\", \"CR31\", \"CR32\", \"CR33\"], \"section\": \"Background\", \"text\": \"Considering the mechanisms in which racial disparities persist draws attention to the impacts of institutional racism [18]. Better [19] defines institutional racism as the \\u201cpatterns, procedures, practices, and policies\\u201d that function within institutions to intentionally \\u201cpenalize, disadvantage, and exploit\\u201d racialized persons (p.11). For example, several rehabilitation clinical practice guidelines have been created to inform practice for persons with TBI using the most up-to-date evidence-based research, which provides recommendations for rehabilitation professionals and healthcare providers to promote optimal functioning and recovery post-injury [20, 21]. One form of scientific evidence that can be used to inform these practice guidelines is the first-hand rehabilitation experiences of persons with TBI, which predominately give insight into the organization of rehabilitation services [22], effectiveness of programs [23, 24] perceptions and experiences about the rehabilitation process [25\\u201327], transition into the community [28, 29], gendered [30, 31] and cultural experiences of rehabilitation [32], and service needs [33]. One of the ways in which institutional racism operates is through the silencing and erasure of the experiences of Black people with TBI. Existing qualitative studies provide limited insight into the experiences of Black and other racialized persons with TBI. While literature reports that racial health disparities disproportionately impact Black people with TBI, such qualitative studies either exclude race data in the demographics or aggregate the data to present a collective narrative that tells the story of the TBI rehabilitation journey as though it is a universal one.\"}, {\"pmc\": \"PMC11270842\", \"pmid\": \"\", \"reference_ids\": [\"CR34\", \"CR35\", \"CR35\"], \"section\": \"Background\", \"text\": \"In 2020, the Public Health Agency of Canada (PHAC) released the Social Determinants and Inequities in Health for Black Canadians snapshot documenting anti-Black racism as a determinant of health outcomes and a pertinent factor in health and institutional disparities [34]. In a recent scoping review, Omar et al. [35] examined the clinical journey of Black TBI patients to understand better what is known about the care continuum for this population. Amongst many important findings from this review, the most striking was how racism was identified as a normalized practice in research and one that largely remained unnamed but, in some instances, was referred to in other terms such as racial bias, prejudice, and systemic barriers which are considered as components of racism [35] However, the need to examine the first-hand experience of Black persons with TBI, how racism manifests in rehabilitation institutions, and the outcomes for Black persons with TBI remain.\"}, {\"pmc\": \"PMC11270842\", \"pmid\": \"\", \"reference_ids\": [\"CR36\"], \"section\": \"Background\", \"text\": \"To date, the TBI rehabilitation literature that considers Black populations has primarily focused on documenting racial health disparities in recovery and functional outcomes using methodological approaches driven by positivist paradigms based on decontextualized knowledge that leaves out the contextual reality of Black lives. The findings from these studies suggest that some rehabilitation institutions fail to fulfill their stated purpose of supporting optimal functioning at home and in communities. Critical qualitative health research has the potential to illuminate the fundamental mechanisms that contribute to differential outcomes in the everyday lives of people who experience social injustice daily [36]. As such, an analysis of the rehabilitation experiences across different institutional spaces across the continuum of care is vital in identifying how institutional racism shows up in practice. Using a critical approach can suggest where researchers, rehabilitation professionals, educators, and policymakers can intervene to dismantle the institutionalized practices that contribute to poor outcomes and limited life opportunities for Black people with TBI. Therefore, this study addresses the following research question using critical race theory (CRT) to foreground institutional racism: What do the stories of Black survivors of TBI, their family caregivers, and rehabilitation providers tell us about how racism manifests in rehabilitation?\"}, {\"pmc\": \"PMC11270842\", \"pmid\": \"\", \"reference_ids\": [\"CR37\", \"CR38\", \"CR39\", \"CR38\", \"CR40\", \"CR41\", \"CR41\", \"CR42\", \"CR38\", \"CR43\", \"CR38\", \"CR44\", \"CR45\"], \"section\": \"Study design\", \"text\": \"This study used a constructivist-informed narrative inquiry [37, 38]. Narrative inquiry provides a window into understanding the experiences of participants and the meanings they attach to those experiences as, \\\"story makes the implicit explicit, the hidden seen, the unformed formed, and the confusing clear\\\" ([39], p.196). This design aligned with the lead investigators' constructivist worldview such that humans carry themselves through the world through storytelling, which provides richness and depth into the multiple lived realities of the participants and how they make sense of those realities [38, 40]. Using a constructivist paradigm allowed the researchers to understand and explore the multiple realities experienced by the participants. Constructivists adhere to a relativist position, meaning they do not believe in one truth but in multiple and equally acceptable subjective realities that differ from one individual to another [41]. Operating from this paradigm also meant that the relationship between the researcher and the participants were transactional, meaning that the findings from the study emerged from knowledge co-constructed by the investigator and the participants [41, 42]. The co-constructive nature of narrative inquiry allows for unique insights into participants' experiences and enables researchers and clinicians to understand how care can be improved [38, 43]. Riessman [38] acknowledges that the stories people live and tell happen in a particular context and are situated historically, socially, and politically, thus, they must be understood within prevalent discourses and power relations. As such, CRT is used as a conceptual framework to understand the rehabilitation narratives of the participants in this study. This methodological bricolage is known to examine the experiences of people who have been marginalized, silenced, and disempowered [44]. This study was approved by the Research Ethics Board at the University of Toronto (protocol # 40525). This manuscript was prepared using the consolidated criteria for reporting qualitative research (COREQ) checklist [45].\"}, {\"pmc\": \"PMC11270842\", \"pmid\": \"\", \"reference_ids\": [\"CR44\", \"CR46\", \"CR47\", \"CR48\", \"CR50\", \"CR48\", \"CR50\", \"CR49\", \"CR49\", \"CR51\", \"CR49\", \"CR44\", \"CR49\"], \"section\": \"Theoretical framework\", \"text\": \"This study was situated in a CRT lens which is a framework that provides opportunities to examine pertinent issues of race and racism by considering the role of institutions by drawing on the experiences of groups of people who are deeply impacted [44]. CRT proceeds with an understanding that although institutional racism is less visible than individual forms of racist actions, the effects can be more harmful as they require change beyond an individual and establish the norms that govern institutions and organizations. CRT emerged in the mid 1970\\u2019s to address the impacts of race and racism in the U.S. judicial system [46, 47]. There are five basic CRT tenets that are widely used by theorists. First, racism is a pervasive feature of society that operates through colourblind ideologies that evade race and its contributions to treatment and outcomes [48\\u201350]. Colourblindness is based on the belief that the racial group to which one belongs and any differences based on race should not be considered in decisions [48\\u201350]. Second, race is a social construction, a product of social and political ideas that influence how people relate to one another [49]. This means that race is not biological; instead, it is a social classification system created by humans [49]. Third, whiteness is a form of property that grants White people a set of privileges based on their identity [51]. Fourth, the concept of interest convergence explains that any progress that is made to address racial health disparities, will happen as long as it benefits the dominant majority, which is White people [49]. Fifth, taking action on systemic racism requires counternarratives to the deficit narratives typically represented in research and practice [44, 49]. Based on these five tenants, CRT serves as a suitable framework to examine the impact of race and racism in the institution of rehabilitation facilities for Black people with TBI. These manifestations of these CRT tenants and concepts are described in more detail in reporting the qualitative findings and are further elaborated in the discussion section.\"}, {\"pmc\": \"PMC11270842\", \"pmid\": \"\", \"reference_ids\": [\"CR52\", \"CR53\"], \"section\": \"Participant recruitment\", \"text\": \"Participants were recruited using purposeful sampling [52] to find Black survivors of TBI, family caregivers, and rehabilitation providers who had knowledge and experience with TBI rehabilitation in a Canadian context. This involved directly approaching organizations and spaces which have people who have knowledge about the scope of the study. Snowball sampling was also employed by asking those recruited who reached out to share the study information with other potential participants such as family, friends, and co-workers who meet the criteria to participate [53]. Survivors of TBI and their family caregivers learned of the study through rehabilitation providers in their circle of care who facilitated recruitment by informing potential participants of the study. Recruitment flyers and messages were shared on Twitter including announcements made in newsletters from local and national brain injury and rehabilitation organizations. Rehabilitation providers were informed about the study through local brain injury and rehabilitation organizations across Canada, professional practice associations who shared recruitment flyers through weekly newsletters and emails to members, and on Twitter.\"}, {\"pmc\": \"PMC11270842\", \"pmid\": \"\", \"reference_ids\": [\"Tab1\", \"CR54\"], \"section\": \"Participant recruitment\", \"text\": \"All persons were required to self-identify as Black or someone from the African diaspora, communicate in English, and be consenting adults capable of providing informed consent to participate in the study. Table 1 provides a summary of the inclusion criteria for all categories of participants. Information about TBI was gathered using the OHIO State University Traumatic Brain Injury Identification Method (OSU TBI-ID) which captures details about their injuries and history [54]. Interested participants contacted the first author, who provided detailed information about the study and confirmed their eligibility. All participants were emailed a research package including consent forms, interview questions, and instructions on connecting virtually using the Zoom platform. Informed consent was obtained from all participants before the start of their interview. Providing questions ahead of time was important to help address the power differentials in the research and\\u00a0to empower participants by informing them of what they will be asked as well as giving them the necessary support.\\n\"}, {\"pmc\": \"PMC11270842\", \"pmid\": \"\", \"reference_ids\": [\"CR55\", \"CR56\", \"MOESM1\", \"CR57\", \"CR58\"], \"section\": \"Data collection\", \"text\": \"Demographic information was collected from all participants at the beginning of the first interviews including self-identified ethnicity, racial identity, age, place of birth, gender identity, religious practice, marital status, level of education, place of residence, place of employment, and household income. Specially for persons with TBI, demographic questions were asked about their injury, satisfaction with rehabilitation, the kinds of services they received, and how they paid for these services. Family caregivers and rehabilitation providers were asked similar questions from their perspective. As outlined by Bertaux and Kholi [55], two-step narrative interviewing (e.g., extensive narrative and a period of questioning) was used as the primary method to co-construct narratives with the participants as a form of data. This required creating an environment that enabled active listening and probing about participant narratives. The first author led these narrative interviews and conducted them virtually in a private office at the University of Toronto. Interviews with persons with TBI were spread across three days as part of the empathetic interviewer-participant relationship [56]. One survivor attended the interview with a family caregiver and rehabilitation provider present. At the beginning of the interview, all participants were reminded of the goal of the study to provide context to the interview questions they were asked. The primary question was, \\\"can you please tell me in as much detail as you can your story of what it is like to be a Black man or woman who is living with a traumatic brain injury and your experiences with rehabilitation?\\\" This was followed by a series of open-ended questions that explored participants' narratives based on their responses to the first question and others related to their identities and experiences in rehabilitation. An example of the interview guide used for survivors of TBI can be found in supplementary materials (Additional file 1). Family caregivers and rehabilitation providers where asked similar questions related to their perspective. The second interview, which occurred between one and three weeks apart from the first, was used to probe the experiences that participants shared in their first interviews. At the end of the second interview, all participants were asked, \\u201cwhat is the final message you wanted to get to me about the Black experience in this space?\\u201d In total, fourteen participants (ten women and four men) were interviewed, and each interview lasted, on average, between 60 to 90 minutes and were audio-recorded. The final sample size was nuanced and rich in data to capturing similarities, nuances, contradictions, and tensions among the amount of detail that participants provided about their experiences of being Black in TBI rehabilitation [57, 58].\"}, {\"pmc\": \"PMC11270842\", \"pmid\": \"\", \"reference_ids\": [\"CR59\", \"CR61\", \"CR61\", \"CR62\", \"CR61\"], \"section\": \"Data analysis\", \"text\": \"Data were analyzed in this study using reflexive thematic analysis [59\\u201361] and informed by CRT. Reflexive thematic analysis serves to identify patterns and themes within and across participant\\u2019s narratives of their rehabilitation experiences. Reflexive thematic analysis was chosen due to its (a) alignment with the methodological approach of narrative inquiry and the goal of identifying common patterns, ideas, and themes across the transcripts while staying close to participants\\u2019 own words; (b) theoretical flexibility to bring in paradigmatic and epistemological positions aligned with the study design; and (c) suitability for applied health research with social justice implications for practice [61, 62]. Reflexive thematic analysis was used inductively in this study which means that analysis of narrative interviews was grounded in the data [61].\"}, {\"pmc\": \"PMC11270842\", \"pmid\": \"\", \"reference_ids\": [\"CR59\", \"CR61\", \"CR59\", \"CR61\", \"CR59\", \"CR61\"], \"section\": \"Data analysis\", \"text\": \"The steps taken to conduct this analysis were guided by Braun and Clarke\\u2019s [59, 61] guidelines for using thematic analysis. This analysis was focused on showing how racism becomes an institutionalized practice in TBI rehabilitation. The audio-recordings of the interviews were transcribed verbatim by a professional transcriptionist. Data familiarization was undertaken by the first author who re-listened to all the audio-recordings of the interviews and did multiple and iterative readings of the transcripts. This step involved writing reflexive notes about common patterns and differences, contradictions, and tensions amongst and across the different interview transcripts. As transcripts were read, initial codes were written alongside the margins of transcripts. Open coding was used to generate initial codes using analytical strategies such as asking questions of the data in line with CRT and the focus the study. Visual diagrams of the codes and patterns of the data were created at the beginning to get a more global sense of the generated codes. Weekly meetings were held with the research team to discuss identified codes, patterns, and reflections that were developed during the analysis process. This was an iterative process which involved hand drawn visual schemas where the first author moved back and forth between different phases of analysis outlined in Braun and Clarke [59, 61] until the story being told about the data became clearer. Once preliminary themes were identified and codes were refined, the first author then transferred all data onto NVivo 12 where the transcripts of rehabilitation providers and family caregivers were also coded separately using the identified pre-liminary themes and codes from the survivor transcripts. Given the unexplored nature of these voices, overarching themes were developed with the entire dataset in mind [59, 61]. A final thematic diagram was produced and continuously modified during the writing stage to demonstrate the relationship between the themes and the findings. All steps of the coding and theme development were thoroughly documented to ensure rigor and trustworthiness.\"}, {\"pmc\": \"PMC11270842\", \"pmid\": \"\", \"reference_ids\": [\"CR62\", \"CR61\", \"CR63\", \"CR64\", \"CR65\"], \"section\": \"Reflexivity: researcher as an instrument\", \"text\": \"Finlay [62] defines reflexivity as a \\\"thoughtful, conscious self-awareness in research\\\" (p.532) through an ongoing and dynamic evaluation of the research process and the subjective nature of doing qualitative research. Researcher subjectivity was considered an integral resource in this study, and reflexivity was integrated as part of the dynamic of the research team and the co-construction of knowledge throughout the process [61]. For example, during the interviews, this guided the lead authors\\u2019 judgement in how to respond to participants and the types of experiences to probe. The researchers in this study came in with a conscious awareness of how Black people have been exploited and harmed historically in research studies. An integral part of co-constructing knowledge with the participants involved the lead researcher sharing her insider knowledge. As a researcher, it was important for her to be immersed in the research and share with participants how she related to this work to build trust, which led to the kinds of stories shared in the interviews [63, 64]. This trust was built before starting the interviews and as part of the informed consent process where the lead researcher was explicit about the intentions behind doing this study, how she related to the participants, how their data was going to be stored and used, and the confidentiality of their identities. Building rapport with the participants led to the production of richer data which allowed participants to enter into a space where they could share these profound experiences more easily [65].\"}, {\"pmc\": \"PMC11270842\", \"pmid\": \"\", \"reference_ids\": [\"CR66\", \"CR67\"], \"section\": \"Reflexivity: researcher as an instrument\", \"text\": \"The research team is composed of individuals with diverse disciplinary backgrounds and methodological experiences, which shaped the study design, execution of the interviews, and data analysis. Members of the research team engaged in collective and one-on-one meetings with the lead researcher throughout the research process. The lead researcher documented the tensions between navigating insider and outsider perspectives, the power dynamics at play, and how this influenced the co-construction of knowledge with the research team in her reflexive journal. In this journal, she also recorded insights, comments, conversations, and emotions that emerged and evolved throughout the research process. Before, during, and after interviews, she wrote personal reflexive observations about how her insider and outsider perspectives shaped and influenced the research process (e.g., research-participant relationship and interactions). Methodological reflexivity was also practiced, where the researchers played particular attention to why decisions were made around the nuances of choosing an approach to analysis (e.g., reflexive thematic analysis vs narrative analysis), using a conceptual framework, selecting particular quotes, explaining the context surrounding the quotes, and how these aligned with the nature of co-constructing knowledge to ensure research rigor and ethical considerations [66, 67].\"}, {\"pmc\": \"PMC11270842\", \"pmid\": \"\", \"reference_ids\": [\"CR67\", \"CR68\", \"CR68\", \"CR69\", \"CR70\", \"CR71\"], \"section\": \"Quality criteria for methodological rigor and trustworthiness\", \"text\": \"Methodological rigor and trustworthiness of the findings were maintained through various criteria outlined in Tracy [67] and described below. Triangulation of data [68] was used in two different ways in this study, including through the various approaches to collecting data such as demographic questionnaires and narrative interviews and through the triangulation of different study participant perspectives, such as persons with TBI across the spectrum of injury, family caregivers, and various rehabilitation providers. Investigator triangulation was used to minimize the potential bias of only having one person code, gather, and analyze the data [68]. The divergent viewpoints of members of the research team were used to cross-check and verify the interpretation of data by other members of the research team through regular discussions and meetings. Periodic peer debriefing [69] with critical friends such as the doctoral supervisors, committee members, and knowledgeable qualitative health researchers was used to mitigate the different ways the researcher influenced the research process. As part of peer debriefing, the first author engaged in regular meetings with critical friends before and after interviews to share, discuss and challenge ideas throughout the analysis and writing process. Prolonged engagement and immersion with the data through data collection and analysis [70, 71] was applied, and through this, the first author spent long periods with participants to build rapport which led participants to open up more during the interviews. Reflexive notes were recorded throughout the process. The audit trail was maintained through different stages of the research process, including the conception of the study, generation of codes, construction of themes, questions raised about the connection between themes and codes, and tensions and contradictions raised amongst different participant experiences. Lastly, the credibility of the results was established through thick descriptions using detailed quotes.\"}, {\"pmc\": \"PMC11270842\", \"pmid\": \"\", \"reference_ids\": [\"Tab2\", \"Tab3\", \"Tab4\"], \"section\": \"Results\", \"text\": \"A total of seven survivors of TBI, three family caregivers, and four rehabilitation providers across the province of Ontario participated in this study. Table 2 provides the socio-demographic characteristics for all participants. Of the sample of survivors, most identified as sustaining moderate to severe TBI (57%) and were of ages ranging from 19 to 52 with an average age of 35. 3 \\u00b1 9.4 years. Time since injury of the most recent TBI ranged from as little as one year to 17 years since the most recent TBI. Information about sex (e.g., male and female) was collected. However, participant gender is only reported in the demographic table. Women made up 57% of the sample of persons with TBI. A total of 29% of these participants sustained their injury through motor-vehicle collisions, another 29% through bike accidents, and one through an\\u00a0assault. Two individuals sustained their injuries during the COVID-19 pandemic, and all persons with TBI were currently receiving some form of rehabilitation for their injury (See Table 3 for injury characteristics). There were three family caregivers who identified as women, with an average age of 45.7 \\u00b1 4.5 years and spent an average of 3.3 years caregiving for their loved ones. Two were caregivers to their children with TBI (son and daughter) and one was a caregiver for her husband. Lastly, two physiotherapists, one occupational therapist, and one social worker participated. About 75% of the rehabilitation therapists were women, with an average age of 47 \\u00b1 13.1 years. Years of experience ranged from as little as five years of experience to over 30 years. Table 4 provides more information about the practice settings and years of experience for caregivers and rehabilitation providers.\\n\"}, {\"pmc\": \"PMC11270842\", \"pmid\": \"\", \"reference_ids\": [\"Fig1\"], \"section\": \"Results\", \"text\": \"It is important to note that the knowledge produced in these findings were co-constructed between the researcher and participants during the narrative interviews. In the reporting of the findings, the reader will be hearing from the participants but also from the lead investigator as she brings forward the process, she was in with co-constructing these narratives. Four themes and eight sub-themes were conceptualized, describing how racism becomes institutionalized in Black experiences of TBI rehabilitation. Figure 1 depicts a pictorial representation of the relationship between the conceptualized themes and CRT ideas. The themes revealed that racism becomes institutionalized in the practices, procedures, and policies perpetuated and upheld through rehabilitation providers in four different ways: (1) the institutional construction of deficient Black bodies, (2) the institutional construction of rehabilitation access, (3) the institutional investments in resisting and approximating whiteness in rehabilitation practice, and (4) the institutional construction of deficient Black futures. Below, these findings are presented.\"}, {\"pmc\": \"PMC11270842\", \"pmid\": \"\", \"reference_ids\": [\"CR72\"], \"section\": \"Oral narratives shared between rehabilitation providers\", \"text\": \"This rehabilitation therapist expressed her concerns that all Black male TBI patients are always referred to as violent the moment they present behavioural problems related to their brain injury. These are the kinds of stereotypes that are portrayed about Black men as inherently being criminals and dangerous which reinforces their criminalization [72]. As illustrated in the extract above, when the rehabilitation provider states, \\u201c\\u2026he's in a rehab setting that supposedly deals with brain injury but they still didn't get it. You don't have a million people going through somebody's room with all different ways of working with him and expect him to be OK\\u2026\\u201d, other members of the rehabilitation team did not follow protocol and actually work to help the individual defuse the behavioural outputs in a manner that was appropriate for someone with a TBI, particularly someone who was assaulted. By rushing into his room in large numbers, this could re-traumatize and trigger the patient. The rehabilitation provider also indicated something important by revealing that she noticed his behaviour would get worse when he knew was under the care of other providers who would not treat him like a person suggesting that the behavioural outputs might be his way of communicating that he was in danger. From the reporting of these encounters, rather than taking the time to consider what triggers a Black TBI patient, rehabilitation therapists and other service providers would only consider the fact that a Black person with TBI is just a Black person and that all Black men are violent and aggressive. This suggests that Black TBI patients who are seen as being unmanageable and violent at their baseline are not seen as people who can benefit from rehabilitation and, therefore, will not be recommended for opportunities for recovery and regaining functioning. For the patient displayed in the example above, the clinical setting was so bad that he had to transition out of the hospital sooner as the space was no longer considered to be safe for him.\"}, {\"pmc\": \"PMC11270842\", \"pmid\": \"\", \"reference_ids\": [\"CR73\", \"CR74\"], \"section\": \"Written narratives documented in medical records\", \"text\": \"She described that she was expected to provide physical therapy to this White TBI patient despite his tendency to be violent and uttering death threats to other service providers about what he would do to her as a Black woman. The excerpt above also suggests that other service providers were aware of these narratives, but they were not documented in his medical records. By saying,\\u00a0\\\"\\u2026are you sure you're not just being too touchy\\u2026\\\"\\u00a0her boss made excuses that took the focus away from the White patient being violent and instead placed the blame on the Black woman provider, also implying that the behaviour is attributed to the brain injury and not him as a person. This illustrates that whiteness affords White TBI patients a level of protection from the harmful implications of written narratives of violence and aggression, reinforcing who deserves rehabilitation. Some of the rehabilitation providers did not explain, rather they went right into showing the comparison knowing that as a Black woman whose been in this space, there was a shared understanding of the comparison being made. In the excerpt above, what is unspoken but was communicated as part of the encounter in the interview was that a comparison was being made here between what was happening with this patient and what would happen if the patient were Black which is a comparison that was similarly expressed by other female providers. Beyond the portrayal of Black TBI bodies as deficient, this also provides a window into how the bodies of Black women providers are disregarded and the lack of protection that they receive by not sharing this pertinent information including the employment discrimination [73, 74].\"}, {\"pmc\": \"PMC11270842\", \"pmid\": \"\", \"reference_ids\": [\"CR75\", \"CR76\"], \"section\": \"Rehabilitation therapists gate-keep at insurance companies\", \"text\": \"In the example above, the participant perceived that the social worker racially profiled this Black man and assumed prior deficiency in functioning attributed to his race through the line of questioning that was asked. This is similar to the body of literature which describes that Black people are labelled as having learning disabilities, lower IQs, are placed in special education classes, and have lowered school performance as a consequence of unscientific discourse [75, 76].\"}, {\"pmc\": \"PMC11270842\", \"pmid\": \"\", \"reference_ids\": [\"CR76\", \"CR77\"], \"section\": \"Rehabilitation therapists gate-keep at insurance companies\", \"text\": \"She was attempting to prove that because he is a Black man, he likely came from a family where the father was violent and abusive towards his mother which draws in the literature about the trope of absent Black fathers and their endangered sons [76, 77]. In the interview encounter, he described that the insurance company denied him treatment three times even though he was officially diagnosed with a TBI by his care team. What is particularly interesting about his experiences and those of all other survivor participants is how they were constantly denied access to rehabilitation funding and services which lead to declines in functional gains, rehabilitation progress, and poor emotional and psychological well-being. Survivors who were covered by insurance expressed that they would get poor quality care where the clinician would cancel an appointment, cut an appointment short, or continue to reschedule but billed for these sessions, which reduced their funding and in many other instances they described how they would be paying for services to get treatments that they did not believe they needed.\"}, {\"pmc\": \"PMC11270842\", \"pmid\": \"\", \"reference_ids\": [\"CR78\", \"CR79\"], \"section\": \"Rehabilitation professionals gatekeep publicly funded rehabilitation services\", \"text\": \"What is alarming and not surprising is how she self-advocates for herself in expressing the importance of meeting her rehabilitation goals to support her mental health but is ignored by her rehabilitation team. The participant perceived that the rehabilitation team pathologized her by over-emphasizing her mental illness without considering the physical and cognitive aftermaths of the TBI that she had to live with, which impacted her day-to-day functioning and mental well-being. This draws attention to other scholarship which have reported that Black people are more likely to be misdiagnosed for mental illness by White professionals [78] and similar to the ways in which Black patients\\u2019 pain levels are less likely to be taken seriously than White patients and other ethnic minorities [79]. This excerpt illustrates how the rehabilitation team made decisions on her behalf without even consulting with her and neglected her input, limiting her capacity to make decisions about her care and suggesting that they knew what was best for her, which was also seen in other interviews with survivor participants. The lack of attention to her physical limitations related to the TBI strained her mental health. In another part of her interview, she described how she attended a hospital-based mental health support group and was traumatized by the experience. This set her back months with her rehabilitation goals because she was exposed to other people\\u2019s problems that were overwhelming and detrimental to her mental health. In fact, the gate keeping of publicly funded rehabilitation services by weaponizing the need for mental health was a common occurrence in the narratives shared by some of the other survivors.\"}, {\"pmc\": \"PMC11270842\", \"pmid\": \"\", \"reference_ids\": [\"CR80\", \"CR81\"], \"section\": \"The institutional investments in resisting and approximating whiteness in rehabilitation practice: \\u201cYou\\u2019ve got to put your mask on\\u201d (P13)\", \"text\": \"The excerpt above illustrates how this participant selected rehabilitation goals that he felt were appropriate by emphasizing that\\u00a0\\u201c\\u2026 you've got to put your mask on. You've got to prepare yourself a certain way in order to rise up within the society that's created in that certain way\\u2026.\\u201d\\u00a0The mask symbolized that whiteness holds value in rehabilitation and society, reinforcing that Blackness does not. For Black men who have to carry themselves in the world in ways that approximate whiteness as a survival mechanism, the cognitive and physical limitations accompanying TBI make it difficult to wear that \\\"white mask.\\\" He uses the metaphor of a white mask [80] to describe how he attempted to approximate whiteness. This displayed his double consciousness [81] by showing how he concealed his true self which meant that he had one mind that he intended for white people to see and another that represented his true self as a Black man but his ability to do this was complicated by the cognitive sequelae related to the TBI. As part of this encounter, P13 described the difficulty in having to put on this \\u201cwhite mask\\u201d as a Black man with a TBI. He shared, \\u201cBecause somewhere along the line, your mask isn\\u2019t going to be fitting right, you know what I\\u2019m trying to say? It\\u2019s not going to be fitting right because you got this going on in your brain and you\\u2019ve got a whole bunch of whatever chaos going on with your mind or whatever, and then you\\u2019ve got to put on [white mask]\\u201d (P13, Male, Survivor). He expressed that he operated in a way that approximated whiteness as that was the only option, he felt like he had to get to a place where he could have the best chance at participating in society. For Black men survivors of TBI, the pressures to approximate whiteness meant that they worked on rehabilitation goals that they believed helped them not \\\"look like\\\" they had a brain injury which meant that they focused on physical functioning and often neglected cognitive and psychosocial elements of their recovery. What is also important to note is how P13 expressed that\\u00a0\\\"\\u2026 you're putting in someone who I cannot relate to at all\\u2026\\\" suggesting that the White clinician reinforces whiteness and the need to work on goals that assimilate in close proximity to whiteness. This suggests that perhaps working with a clinician of a similar background would allow for opportunities to connect and work on other goals such as addressing mental health and psychosocial functioning. This point of view was expressed by all the survivors.\"}, {\"pmc\": \"PMC11270842\", \"pmid\": \"\", \"reference_ids\": [\"CR48\", \"CR49\", \"CR82\", \"CR84\"], \"section\": \"Racism is an ordinary experience in traumatic brain injury rehabilitation\", \"text\": \"CRT centers on the premise that racism is pervasive, an integral part of society, and the ordinary way institutions operate [48, 49] such as TBI rehabilitation. One mechanism of the ordinariness of racism is through practices and procedures that promote a false illusion of fair and equal treatment that instead function to perpetuate whiteness and maintain White supremacy in rehabilitation using ideologies such as colourblindness (e.g., neutrality) and meritocracy (e.g., hard work and merit) which minimize the significance of race. This is seen in participant narratives where they bring a race-conscious awareness to rehabilitation by using different strategies afforded by class privilege to resist whiteness and anti-Black racism and, in other instances, approximate whiteness to benefit from rehabilitation. Other literature has shown that racism and whiteness operate to provide White patients with more appropriate health care and that providers in medicine, nursing, and dentistry provide care informed by colourblind ideologues [82\\u201384]. The findings from this study support this premise and provide important nuances relevant to a rehabilitation context.\"}, {\"pmc\": \"PMC11270842\", \"pmid\": \"\", \"reference_ids\": [\"CR80\", \"CR81\", \"CR85\", \"CR88\"], \"section\": \"Racism is an ordinary experience in traumatic brain injury rehabilitation\", \"text\": \"An important finding is the use of the metaphor, \\\"white mask,\\\" which was coined by Franz Fanon [80]. This metaphor referred to the kind of code-switching that happened for Black men with TBI where the white mask represented the need to assimilate to the norms and values of whiteness while in a rehabilitation context. In The Souls of Black Folk, CRT scholar Du Bois [81] used the term double consciousness to articulate \\\"this sense of always looking at one's self through the eyes of others\\\" (p.10-11). For instance, double consciousness was prevalent in survivors' narratives, demonstrating that they came into TBI rehabilitation and realized that to benefit from services offered and receive optimal care, they needed to operate in a way that approximated whiteness which was not only difficult but also had its consequences. This meant that Black men worked on rehabilitation goals that a White clinician could understand, like addressing physical functioning and neglecting cognitive and emotional well-being (e.g., mental health), which raised further challenges on their road to recovery. This may result in what is referred to as the 'burden of acting white hypothesis' seen in Black students across different academic settings leading to underachievement [85\\u201388] raising critical questions about the types of goals rehabilitation providers recommend, encourage, and support. TBI rehabilitation must understand the costs of double consciousness and address efforts towards eliminating the need for Black patients to feel that they need to conform to a particular set of standards defined by race if the goal of rehabilitation is to maximize functioning and participation in daily activities for all people.\"}, {\"pmc\": \"PMC11270842\", \"pmid\": \"\", \"reference_ids\": [\"CR89\", \"CR90\", \"CR91\", \"CR94\"], \"section\": \"Social construction of deficient Black bodies with traumatic brain injury\", \"text\": \"One of the hallmarks of CRT is the fact that race is a social construct with no biological basis and was created to legitimize the subordination of Black people and other racialized persons [89, 90]. For instance, the dominant narrative in research about race and TBI rehabilitation often portrays a deficit perspective about Black people, continuously describing them as experiencing worse outcomes across various measures compared to their White counterparts. This is seen in the institutional construction of deficient Black bodies. Our findings provide deeper insight into how deficient views operate in a rehabilitation context spotlighting essential nuances related to intersections of race and gender and the consequences. When Black men with TBI enter rehabilitation settings, rehabilitation professionals and other care providers treat their Blackness as the presenting problem rather than addressing the clinical manifestations of the injury. This is seen where Black men with TBI are labelled as aggressive, violent, and dangerous, unlike their White counterparts, which is similar to the kinds of dominant narratives perpetuated about Black men that have been well documented [91\\u201394].\"}, {\"pmc\": \"PMC11270842\", \"pmid\": \"\", \"reference_ids\": [\"CR95\", \"CR96\"], \"section\": \"Social construction of deficient Black bodies with traumatic brain injury\", \"text\": \"Similarly, Black women caregivers were labelled as being complicated and problematic when advocating and supporting their loved ones compared to White caregivers. This can be recognized as the trope of the angry Black woman stereotype which casts Black women as aggressive, ill-tempered, illogical, overbearing, hostile, and attitudinal [95, 96]. This reinforces the importance of considering race and gender in addressing these racist outcomes in rehabilitation practice. Addressing institutional racism should involve monitoring what kinds of narratives get documented about Black people with TBI and how this shapes referrals to rehabilitation services and programs.\"}, {\"pmc\": \"PMC11270842\", \"pmid\": \"\", \"reference_ids\": [\"CR49\", \"CR97\"], \"section\": \"Social construction of deficient Black bodies with traumatic brain injury\", \"text\": \"Applying CRT brings our attention to the norms of whiteness and how it sets the standards [49], in this case, the ideal White patient and the problematic Black patient. Frankenberg [97] describes that the white racial frame makes whiteness normative and the unspoken standard by which all other people are judged and viewed. This white racial frame may account for why White TBI patients were tolerated and treated with dignity and Black TBI patients were treated as problematic unrelated to their injuries. These findings are significant as they suggest that rehabilitation can be a dangerous place for Black people with TBI, with gendered consequences as the white racial frame constructs Blackness as synonymous with criminality (e.g., narratives of violence, aggression, drug users, drug dealers) which reinforces racial profiling and becomes more dangerous the more significant the severity of the injury is and if the injury is sustained through mechanisms of violence. This can impact how Black TBI patients are orally presented during clinical meetings, the kinds of information shared about them, and the stories shared between service providers. In this way, other service providers may refuse to work with them and see them as problematic, leading to a domino effect which can result in discontinued rehabilitation, reduced hours in rehabilitation, lowered quality of care, unsuitable treatment options, and lack of referrals and recommendations for continued care. If those narratives get written into their medical records, then that becomes the story people tell about them, which means that opportunities for recovery and rehabilitation become limited.\"}, {\"pmc\": \"PMC11270842\", \"pmid\": \"\", \"reference_ids\": [\"CR51\", \"Fig1\", \"CR51\", \"CR49\"], \"section\": \"Traumatic brain injury rehabilitation is white property\", \"text\": \"One of the major tenets of CRT, which was crucial in understanding the cumulative impacts of institutional racism in TBI rehabilitation, is the tenet of whiteness as property which refers to rights based on whiteness [51] as illustrated in Fig.\\u00a01. One of these rights is the right to exclude [51], and meritocracy is one mechanism used to exclude Black people from TBI rehabilitation. In CRT, meritocracy, which allocates resources and opportunities, is inherently inequitable as it fails to account for the systems and institutions that exclude racialized people [49], and in this case, Black people with TBI. Meritocracy enables more White people to gain access to rehabilitation despite the illusion that access depends on funding, injury severity, and other objective criteria. However, meeting these merit-based requirements is increasingly difficult for Black people with TBI. It is important that rehabilitation institutions keep track of whether the number of Black people entering into rehabilitation programs and services is increasing or decreasing.\"}, {\"pmc\": \"PMC11270842\", \"pmid\": \"\", \"reference_ids\": [\"CR98\", \"CR8\", \"CR9\", \"CR99\", \"CR7\", \"CR11\", \"CR99\", \"CR9\"], \"section\": \"Traumatic brain injury rehabilitation is white property\", \"text\": \"This study draws attention to how rehabilitation therapists gatekeep [98] services, resources, and knowledge at the level of both publicly funded services and through insurance companies in the province of Ontario. As similarly reported in previous studies [8, 9, 99], Black survivors in this sample overwhelmingly experienced challenges getting into rehabilitation where some have expressed waiting for many years, including up to a decade. These decisions are made at the professional discretion of the rehabilitation professional and their clinical reasoning. What is quite interesting is at the level of insurance companies where participants revealed how rehabilitation professionals used race as part of their assessments to determine whether or not Black TBI patients' injuries were worthy of rehabilitation which may also explain why Black patients with TBI have difficulty accessing rehabilitation even when covered by insurance [7, 11]. The literature has shown that Black people with TBI are less likely to get into rehabilitation even after controlling for injury severity and insurance status [99] and are more likely to get discharged home [9]. Although it is beyond the scope of this study to go into a lengthy discussion about ethical and clinical reasoning, it is important to mention that perhaps what underpins profession-specific rehabilitation models and theories may contribute to and reinforce the poor outcomes that disproportionately impact Black TBI patients in rehabilitation that warrant further investigation. Future researchers may also wish to consider examining the process of rehabilitation admittance through public and private services and identify the interplay between racially biased standardized questions and subjective questions spontaneously created by the assessor. Equally important is examining the intake process, clinical decision making, and what criteria rehabilitation professionals use to determine who gets into rehabilitation and who does not. Over time, rehabilitation institutions must monitor how the number of Black TBI patients in rehabilitation compare to the number of White patients.\"}, {\"pmc\": \"PMC11270842\", \"pmid\": \"\", \"reference_ids\": [\"CR100\", \"CR101\", \"CR103\"], \"section\": \"Traumatic brain injury rehabilitation is white property\", \"text\": \"One of the most demoralizing findings from this study is the construction of deficient Black futures, which illustrates a deeply rooted issue in society that impacts all Black people generally, specifically those with TBI which is seen even in the education system for Black people with TBI [100] and other Black students who are denied opportunities to learn and participate in academic life [101\\u2013103]. When rehabilitation providers neglect to ask questions about participation and community integration, disregard the need to provide necessary treatment, and differentially incorporate pertinent assessments, it reinforces rehabilitation as a property owned by and for the use of White patients and other White people. In this context of rehabilitation practice, whiteness as property refers to the fact that whiteness as an identity is the acceptable standard and norm that is depicted to be the beneficiary of rehabilitation support. This means that Black patients are not afforded the same rights in being supported in occupations, having opportunities to participate in community life and the rights to benefit from rehabilitation as their White counterparts. Rehabilitation institutions must audit the treatment plans of Black TBI patients in rehabilitation to monitor what kinds of recommendations, referrals, assessments, and goals Black patients are supported with which can also function as an accountability measure for how conscious and unconscious racialized beliefs about Black people\\u2019s worth and value in society contribute to lower expectations and the lack of investments in the futures of Black people with TBI.\"}, {\"pmc\": \"PMC11270842\", \"pmid\": \"\", \"reference_ids\": [\"CR10\", \"CR13\", \"CR16\", \"CR104\", \"CR105\"], \"section\": \"Traumatic brain injury rehabilitation is white property\", \"text\": \"What if rehabilitation practice made a conscious effort to invest in Black patients' futures? Future research may wish to examine what this could look like given the findings of this study. It is important to note that this does not mean that Black people with TBI do not benefit from rehabilitation, but that practices, procedures, and policies were not designed for their benefit. Rehabilitation professionals put less effort into thinking about the futures of their Black TBI patients by not engaging in discussions about how to support participation in vocation and other meaningful occupations, which appeared to be the standard treatment for all White patients. Further, economic privilege does not insulate Black survivors from the realities of not being seen as worthy enough to be considered for opportunities to engage in meaningful employment and other productive activities, including going to school and participating in community life. Similar to the participant narratives, other studies using different methodologies and based in the U.S. have shown that Black persons with TBI receive less intense treatment [10] and experience poor community integration and participation in productive activities [13\\u201316, 104, 105]. Perhaps this is why Black people with TBI spend more time unemployed. Future research should consider important components needed in rehabilitation programs and services to dismantle whiteness (e.g., supporting alternative ways knowing, doing, and being) and support participation in daily life for Black survivors of TBI. This should also involve examining what discharge planning looks like for Black people and ensuring that they have connected supports when transitioning into the community.\"}]"
Metadata
"{\"issue-copyright-statement\": \"\\u00a9 BioMed Central Ltd., part of Springer Nature 2024\"}"