Dr. Jessica Barton
Wired for Hope
On Wired for Hope we explore the brain, behaviour, and mental health with people who have lived with brain injury and those who have studied it. I'm Dr. Jess, an NHS clinical psychologist in the UK, university lecturer, and published author, passionate about making neuroscience more accessible. We’ll explore a range of topics from sports related concussion, to feminist perspectives on disability, and mental health and identity. We’ll also shine a light on some of the latest research from around the world, in our regular feature ‘what’s new in neuroscience’. Subscribe today to join the Wired fo...
Author
Dr. Jessica Barton
Category
Podcast website
Latest episode
Jun 29, 2026
Where to listen?
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Episodes
ProSocial in Action: From the NHS to the Ebola Crisis (Part 2) | Wired for Hope 29.06.2026 30:40
In part two, Richard Coates picks up with the third pillar of ProSocial: contextual behavioural science and ACT, and how psychological flexibility, values, and an awareness of our threat system shape how we behave within groups. Richard and Dr Jess discuss what a ProSocial session with a struggling NHS team actually looks like, including the ACT Matrix tool, and explore the common mistakes l...
ProSocial: How Cooperation Makes Us Human (Part 1) | Wired for Hope 15.06.2026 35:48
In this episode, Dr Jess welcomes Richard Coates back to the podcast to discuss the science of human cooperation and what it means for teams working under pressure in healthcare and beyond. Richard, who is a psychologist and ProSocial facilitator, introduces ProSocial - a framework rooted in three interlocking theories. He begins with evolutionary science, exploring why cooperation is not just a n...
Brain Injury and Homelessness: Designing Services That Work (Part 2) 31.05.2026 30:52
In part two of this conversation, Dr Jess and George Evans pick up their conversation about brain injury and homelessness, turning their attention to what better services could and should look like. George describes the specialist residential service he is developing in Lewisham, designed to support people with acquired brain injury and alcohol-related brain damage who have repeatedly fallen...
Brain Injury and Homelessness: The Hidden Picture (Part 1) 17.05.2026 42:48
In this episode, Dr Jess is joined by George Evans, commissioner of supported housing and homelessness at Lewisham Council in South East London. They explore the intertwined relationship between brain injury, alcohol-related brain damage, and homelessness - a topic that remains under-recognised in both clinical and policy settings. George describes what homelessness really looks like, from the sta...
The Iced Viking: Practical Breathwork Advice (Part 2) 04.05.2026 32:28
In part two of this conversation, Chuck McGee III, brain injury survivor, breathwork coach, and ACT therapist, picks up where he left off, sharing the deeply personal impact that breathwork has had on his mental health, relationships, and sense of self. He reflects honestly on moving from hyper-vigilance and reactivity to developing what he calls "a pause button," and explains how ACT princi...
The Iced Viking: Trauma, Breath, and Recovery (Part 1) 20.04.2026 1:02:07
In this episode, Dr Jess meets Chuck McGee III, also known as Iced Viking, a traumatic brain injury survivor, breathwork coach, and ACT therapist based in California. Chuck opens up about his remarkable and at times raw journey: surviving approximately 24 brain injuries across car and motorcycle accidents and years of working as a bartender in high-conflict environments, where violence becam...
Sex, intimacy, and disability 07.04.2026 1:23:15
In this episode we explore a topic that rarely gets discussed in brain injury rehabilitation: sex, intimacy, and disability. Dr Jess is joined by two experts in this area - Bea Meadow is an award-winning somatic sexologist and retired conscious sex worker ,specialising in disability. Dr Giles Yates is a clinical neuropsychologist and couples therapist with more than 20 years' experience in sexuali...
Psychedelic Afterglow Neuroplasticity: How Mushrooms Rewire Your Brain for Weeks | Therapy & Healing 16.03.2026 1:01:21
Psychedelic Afterglow Neuroplasticity is emerging as an exciting discovery in modern neuroscience. Research suggests that after a psychedelic experience, the brain may enter a powerful period of increased flexibility, coinciding with what is experienced as a felt afterglow effect . During this time, neuroplasticity may remain elevated, creating a unique opportunity for emot...
The Psychology of Acceptance 23.02.2026 56:26
In this episode, Dr Jess speaks with Dr Richard Coates, a clinical neuropsychologist, about the transformative power of Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT) - both in brain injury rehabilitation and in everyday life. Richard opens up about his own experience of using ACT skills to show up for the things that matter to him, from walking into a podcast studio with a racing heart to queuing for r...
Living Well with Multiple Sclerosis: Mindfulness and Hope 02.02.2026 53:21
In this episode, Dr Jess speaks with Lucy Traynor, who was 31 when she first experienced symptoms of multiple sclerosis - a diagnosis that would take three years to confirm. Lucy shares the emotional weight of seeing her brain scan for the first time, the frustration of navigating medical systems not designed with women in mind, and how negative media portrayals of MS fuelled her initial fears ab...
Mild brain injury and neurodivergence 12.01.2026 48:14
In this episode, Dr. Jess speaks with Aaron, a PhD researcher and mountain biker who sustained a concussion that left him with persistent symptoms affecting every aspect of his life. Aaron shares his raw experience of struggling with noise sensitivity, motion sickness, debilitating headaches, and concentration difficulties that made completing his PhD feel impossible. He discusses the...
The Complexities of Mild Brain Injury and Sports-Related Concussion 08.12.2025 1:00:10
In this episode, Dr Jess explores mild traumatic brain injury and sports-related concussion with world-renowned neuropsychologist Dr Nigel King. Although most people recover from mild brain injury within weeks, a small percentage develop persistent post-concussion symptoms that can last months or years. Nigel explains the complex interplay between subtle brain injury and psychological...
Mental health after traumatic brain injury 17.11.2025 1:10:51
In this episode, Dr Jess welcomes Andrew Jenkins to the Wired for Hope podcast. Andrew survived a devastating car accident 25 years ago that left him in a coma for four weeks. He shares his raw and honest journey from silently struggling with shame, identity loss, and toxic masculinity to finding self-compassion and purpose. He discusses the turning point of meeting the surgeon who sav...
Supporting mothers after brain injury 27.10.2025 59:03
In this episode of the Wired for Hope podcast, Dr Jess speaks with Dr Phil Butler, a social worker and researcher who completed her PhD on the lived experiences of mothers with acquired brain injury. Phil discusses her groundbreaking research using feminist disability theory to explore why parents with ABI, particularly mothers, have been largely overlooked in the literature, with most studi...
The science of hope in brain injury recovery 13.10.2025 57:18
In our first episode, Dr Jess speaks with Dr Alan Gray, a consultant clinical psychologist, with a specialism in neuropsychology, about the transformative power of hope in brain injury rehabilitation. We explore why hope matters for both mental and physical recovery, the surprising statistics about brain injury prevalence in the UK, and how goal-setting can foster meaningful progress. ...
Trailer - Welcome to Wired for Hope 06.10.2025 1:54
Welcome to Wired for Hope, where we explore the brain, behaviour, and mental health with people who have lived with brain injury and those who have studied it. I'm Dr. Jess, an NHS clinical psychologist in the UK, university lecturer, and published author, passionate about making neuroscience more accessible. We’ll explore a range of topics from sports related concussion, to feminist perspectives...
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