At UW Medicine, life-changing advancements don’t happen overnight — they happen because teams of researchers stay committed to discovery over decades.
The first video in the Research Improves Lives series highlights Bobbi‑Jo Marlin, who endured a traumatic brain injury after a severe car accident. Participating in UW Medicine’s traumatic brain fitness research helped her regain mobility, cognitive function, and the ability to enjoy life again.
Her progress wasn’t instant, but it was made possible by years of scientific persistence.
“The beauty of research is that we can keep improving people’s recovery,” said Dr. Jeanne Hoffman, a Rehabilitation Psychologist who worked closely with Marlin. “There’s all these new technologies and new devices and things like that that could come into being — but unless you have research, you don’t know if those are going to be effective or not.”
Why long-term research matters:
- Decades of inquiry lead to real-world breakthroughs
- Clinical trials turn possibility into patient progress
- Every success story starts in the lab
- Commitment to the process fuels innovation and hope
Research isn’t just what UW Medicine does — it’s how lives are transformed.
Want to see how research helped Bobbi-Jo Marlin?