About Us
The Person-Centred Neurosciences Society, is a growing community of likeminded people, and partnering organisations including companies and charities who all share a desire to drive up the standard of person-centred neurosciences services across primary care and the wider neurology community.
The P-CNS is the leading voice for person-centred neuroscience. We are working to strengthen the connections across the various neuroscience services to enable more person-centred care across the wider neurology community. We encourage both heath professionals and non health professionals, living with neurological conditions, to join us in our aim of strengthening those connections and relations.
Our Vision
The P-CNS’s vision, which acknowledges the significance of learning through lived experiences, is to provide sustainable, consistent, and high-quality care and education services that consider and support the individual needs of the person so they can live well in the community with suspected or confirmed neurological conditions.
Our Mission
The P-CNS’s mission is to:
To support our vision we believe our mission is to encourage and:
- Empower patients, practitioners, and industry partners by promoting engagement in an active community where all voices matter.
- Support the co-creation, provision, and signposting of high-quality education and information services to enhance the delivery of care to people with neurological conditions.
- Stimulate and develop inclusive and meaningful communication amongst all members of the neurology community.
- Value the personal narratives of all people – both patients and practitioners – who live with suspected or confirmed neurological / psychiatric / neurodevelopmental conditions.
- Support improved access to more community- and online-based neurology services.
- Educate health professionals on the importance of their language during patient interactions, to enable patients to make fully informed decisions about their neurological treatment.
- Promote a patient-practitioner partnership that enhances trust and allows patients to express their needs and expectations.
- Give patients within the neurology community the ability to express themselves by sharing their experiences with society members.
- Increase awareness of individual differences within neurological conditions, promoting the importance for practitioners to adapt treatments and meet the needs of the patient.
Together we believe this will enhance the delivery and quality of care to people with suspected and confirmed neurological conditions and optimise their quality of life.
In Partnership
Launched in April 2005 and now with nearly 1600 people (from across the UK and abroad) who are registered with the Society, the P-CNS is keen to collaborate to support the provision of education to healthcare professionals at the frontline of providing care to people living with neurological conditions. We wish to work in partnership with any organisation and company that recognises how learning through lived experiences needs greater recognition as a way to improve the provision of services for those living with neurological conditions and thereby optimise access to expert neurology services.
Neil Bindemann PhD, Founder & Exec Director
Neil Bindemann PhD is Founder and Executive Director of the Person-Centred Neurosciences Society, where his work focuses on advancing a more humane, scientifically grounded and person-centred approach to neuroscience, neurology, emotional health and lifestyle-related care.
Originally trained in immunology and neuroscience, Neil has spent much of his professional life working at the interface between science, medical education, healthcare communication and service development. After completing a Neuroscience PhD in 1993, he moved into medical education and communication, working across fields including immunology, endocrinology, psychology, rehabilitation, respiratory medicine, gastroenterology and neurology.
Neil was instrumental in establishing the Primary Care Neurology Society in 2004, with the aim of supporting education for primary care professionals and improving access to appropriate neurological care. Over time, this work evolved into the Person-Centred Neurosciences Society, reflecting a broader mission: to encourage neuroscience services that listen more deeply to the lived and living experience of people with suspected or confirmed neurological conditions.
A major turning point in Neil’s work came after his own life-altering diagnosis and life-saving neurosurgery for a tumour on the pineal gland in 2015. This experience profoundly reshaped his understanding of diagnosis, recovery, identity, hope and the emotional impact of medical language. It also strengthened his conviction that health professionals and researchers must listen not only to clinical data, but to the person’s experience of what has happened to them.
His recent work explores how trauma-informed thinking, emotional health, neuroimmunology, lifestyle health and person-centred neuroscience can be brought together to improve care. He has written and spoken about the need to move beyond narrow disease labels and towards approaches that support people to live well, recover agency, and understand their own bodies and experiences more fully.
Neil’s work is increasingly focused on what he describes as a shift from living under a prognosis to living within the possibility of healing — not as a denial of diagnosis, but as a more complete, person-centred and biologically informed understanding of how human beings adapt, regulate, recover and change.
