the torch Fall 2015, Issue 3 | Page 21

“It really feels like you’re a team all working toward a common goal. That desire and motivation to meet your patients and colleagues needs is there and very strong.” – Dr. Simon Driver the people who manage the Ginger Murchison Foundation. They told me about Ginger and her family and how they were very community-focused. Ginger had a brain injury, and before her injury she was always happy and active – a big part of the town she lived in. It’s really important to me and our team that we recognize her legacy and values within our work and try to make real strides and progress for others living with a brain injury. I wouldn’t be here and doing a lot of the work without the Ginger Murchison Foundation’s support, and I’m so very appreciative of them and what their funding allows us to do. What drove your interest in TBI in particular? I was a typical master’s student who didn’t know what they wanted to do and my mentor at the time received a phone call from a local rehab center. With my background in exercise science, he asked me to help them put together an activity center for their TBI patients. I created an eight-week program for these patients. I’d learned about the benefits of being active in my coursework, but the impact of exercise was still not tangible to me. Through this project, I saw physical, emotional and psychosocial changes in these patients, and it was a light-bulb moment for me. I knew I could really move the needle here in outcomes for these patients, and I pursued TBI research from there. What research projects are you currently involved in and excited about? I’m very excited about research we’re doing that takes a look at the long-term, positive effects of adopting a healthy lifestyle and improving physical activity and nutrition behaviors of our TBI patients – across the continuum. What differentiates Baylor from other health care organizations? I’ve not worked in an organization before where I feel a sense of commitment to patients and colleagues like I do here. It really feels like you’re a team all working toward a common goal. That desire and motivation to meet your patients and colleagues needs is there and very strong. How would you spend an extra hour in your day? With my wife, Erin. We’re lucky we live right off the Katy Trail and we’re on that all the time … walking, running and biking. I try to live the active lifestyle I promote for our patients. In fact, my colleagues and I all have activity monitors that we wear. Everyone in my office exercises regularly but these monitors made us realize we’re not very good at being active during the workday, so we’ve added in walking routes that we purposefully take or we hold “walking meetings.” 21