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Claim-to-source crosswalk
Click a source badge to open the de-identified source card. Raw documents stay private.
Project Fionigan keeps fragmented FND information connected, source-linked, and human-readable when lived communication becomes difficult.
New to FND? Functional Neurological Disorder (FND) is a real neurological condition that affects how the brain sends and receives signals, which can cause problems with movement, speech, sensation, thinking, or seizure-like episodes. NIH/NINDS overview.
I am not learning how to have FND. I am learning how to have FND publicly.
Clickable source layer
Claims now point to source cards
This page shows the first claim-to-source crosswalk. Each source badge opens a de-identified source card. The raw source document is not public.
This is the first layer. Future builds can add more sentence-level badges without changing the preservation rule.
Crosswalk
Main story claims and source trails
| Area | Claim / section statement | Clickable source badges |
|---|---|---|
| Main story / conference origin | The conference handout became the lived report, and the lived report became the website. | |
| Main story | The project is a medical journey with family in the boat, plus an accessibility and continuity framework around it. | |
| FND / ED bridge | The FND / functional movement lane existed before the later acute-care escalation. | |
| FND / ED bridge | FND and malingering belong to opposite lanes because intentionality matters. | |
| Communication access | Communication-access needs existed before the acute-care escalation. | |
| TDO / court / safety route | The event entered a legal/custody pathway while the medical source map had already framed a functional-neurology lane. | |
| Structural vs functional lane | Structural findings and functional findings both existed and needed reconciliation. | |
| Labs / medication monitoring | Lab and medication-monitoring source trails exist without publishing the raw lab tables. | |
| Functional impact | Therapy, neuropsychology, and later neurology records support functional impact and ongoing treatment attempts. | |
| Website provenance feature | The source-badge layer lets the public story show where a claim came from without opening raw documents. | |
| Cervical spine / structural lane | Cervical spine source lane existed before and after surgery, while abnormal-movement and functional-neurology questions also continued. | |
| Hospital psychiatric chart lane | The early-2025 hospitalization source trail includes inpatient psychiatric/behavioral-health chart fragments that must be read alongside the functional-neurology and communication-access source lane. | Sources: |
| Outreach / no usable handoff | FND-related resource, author, and organization outreach is part of a systemic incomplete-handoff pattern, not a claim against one organization. | Sources: |
| Hospital / inpatient chart lane | Complete 1–20 inpatient RTF packet represented as private raw chart fragments and public de-identified source summaries. | Sources: |
| Medication / monitoring context | Medication-plan source context should be read with lab/monitoring source summaries. | Sources: |
| Diagnostic-labeling contradiction layer | Diagnostic labels, functional-neurology references, legal custody framing, and functional-observation notes belong in one source trail instead of one collapsed interpretation. | Sources: |
| Conference handout | Original handout pages were part of the public conference materials and are now shown fully and unedited like the poster. | Sources: |
| Record transfer / source retrieval | The record trail had to be rebuilt through manual source-retrieval and record-transfer packets across many systems. | Sources: |