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Project Fionigan
A plain-language page about FND, communication access, and how Project Fionigan helps keep a patient’s story together when lived explanation becomes difficult.
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.
Public de-identification
Public version is de-identified
Patient-specific names, provider names, facility names, email addresses, record identifiers, exact identifying routes, and raw source records are removed or generalized in this public website version.
FND landing
Start with the Project Fionigan FND landing page if you want the plain bridge before opening NINDS.
EXTERNAL SOURCE BRIDGE
NINDS Functional Neurologic Disorder page
This page connects Project Fionigan to the official NINDS Functional Neurologic Disorder information page without copying the full external medical page into this site.
The goal is to show how the Fionigan overlay model could eventually sit over an outside source page, helping with reading, search, navigation, and cognitive load while preserving the source.
How to use this source bridge
Why this belongs in the framework
NINDS describes FND as a neurological condition involving changes in how brain networks work rather than structural brain changes, and says physical symptoms are genuine. That public framing matters because Project Fionigan preserves context when systems, records, and communication fragment.
The source page also discusses seizure-like episodes, movement problems, cognitive issues, dizziness, speech difficulties, pain, fatigue, numbness, diagnosis, treatment, clinical trials, and resources. This makes it a useful public reference beside the lived medical and accessibility journey.
Three ways this could work
Prototype bookmarklet
This is a prototype only. It may not work in every browser or every security setting, but it shows the direction: user-controlled overlay on an outside source page.
Project Fionigan overlay prototype
On desktop, this can be dragged to the bookmarks bar. On mobile, a future browser extension or sidecar app is likely the cleaner path.
How the overlay would travel in the future
A normal website cannot carry its JavaScript and floating controls onto an external medical website. The cross-site version requires a user-enabled browser extension, bookmarklet, or local sidecar.
This bridge keeps the source relationship clear while showing how Project Fionigan would frame, read, search, and navigate the source context.