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Discussion Groups
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This list is for people who have suffered a spinal cord injury as the result of an injury or illness. A good opportunity to meet people who know what it's like to walk in our shoes . Coping with our disabilities and the complications that go along post spinal cord injury need to be talked about so we don't feel so alone.
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Women with spinal cord injury make up such a small percentage of the SCI commutity that much of the information and help is aimed at men. Being a woman with SCI, I have gone in search of support and information with few results. While men have been extrodinarily helpful, their needs are far different than the needs of women. Here is a club for women with SCI so that we may offer helpful hints, moral support, and funny stories that we all need from time to time.
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This is a place for discussion, support, and learning about Spinal Cord Injury... It's a club for those whos lives have been affected by spinal injury whether they were injured or know someone who was injured.
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Spinal Cord Injury Pain Research (BOSTON)
DO YOU HAVE PAIN FROM SPINAL CORD INJURY? The Massachusetts General Hospital is seeking volunteers for a research project to evaluate an investigational drug as a treatment for specific types of pain caused by spinal cord injury (SCI). Males and females, between the ages of 18 and 85 with SCI who have persistent pain for a minimum of 3 months may be eligible.
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The goal of this group is to provide a place for those of us whose lives are touched by spinal cord injury to share our experiances. There are other good egroups that focus on research, advocy, and caregivers. This group is more for friendship..for sci individual and partners or loved ones.
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Geoffrey Lance Foundation Mailing List
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Disabled Disability and Psychology Discussion Group (123 subscribers)
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DISABLED-UNDER-25 (13 subscribers)
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Travel for the Disabled (427 subscribers)
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SCI Mailing List: There is an Internet mailing list on the topic of spinal cord injury, called SCIPIN-L List. To join it, send a message to with only the words "subscribe SCIPIN-L" in the body of the message. (After you join, send all messages to the list to , NOT to the address above.)
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MOBILITY SJU Mobility Disablities List. To join, send a message to with only the words "subscribe MOBILITY" in the body of the message. (After you join, send all messages to the list to , NOT to the address above.)
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Research Review Newsletter is the SCI research newsletter of the University of Alabama. A fairly recent on-line article features 22 links to sites currently conducting cure research procedures:
Research for the Cure in Spinal Cord Injury Volume 4, Issue 1, February, 2002Michael Craig, MD and Amie B Jackson, MD
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On-Line SCI Communities and Support
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Spinal Cord Injury Help Site The effort of a lawyer and a paraplegic to offer medical and legal support and information, including a forum for regularly scheduled chat discussions.
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SPINAL CORD INJURY HELPLINE
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Since its inception in 1988, The Alan T Brown Foundation (ATBF) has targeted a single goalfinding a cure for spinal paralysis. The Foundation supports an impressive group of renowned national and international researchers to identify a cure for spinal cord injuries, while serving as a vital resource and support system for the newly injured and their families.
Comments: This is an excellent site, demonstrating a lot of enthusiasm and tenacity in the pursuit of CURE, with a motto that reads "TO STAND UP AND WALK AGAIN"
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SCI Community Center
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SCI-FYI: a guide to Northern California Resources for individuals with spinal cord injury.
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National Spinal Cord Injury Society's site has an exceptionally comprehensive list of support resources
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Starting Your Own SCI Self-Help Group |
Neurological Rehabilitation
Disability Index
Department of Neurosurgery Wake Forest University School of Medicine
Winston-Salem, North Carolina
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Dr. P's Assistance Dogs
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Independence Dogs, Inc. (IDI), a nonprofit organization founded in 1984, provides highly trained service dogs for children and adults with mobility impairments. These special dogs provide all the physical, psychological, and therapeutic support their human partners need to lead full, productive, independent lives.
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