LONG-TERM PSYCHOSOCIAL ADJUSTMENT FOLLOWING HEAD OR SPINAL-CORD INJURY

被引:0
|
作者
ALFANO, DP [1 ]
NEILSON, PM [1 ]
FINK, MP [1 ]
机构
[1] WASCANA REHABIL CTR, REGINA, SK, CANADA
关键词
CLOSED HEAD INJURY; SPINAL CORD INJURY; PREINJURY; POSTINJURY; PSYCHOSOCIAL FUNCTIONING;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
R74 [神经病学与精神病学];
学科分类号
摘要
The long-term psychosocial sequelae of traumatic injury to the brain or spinal cord were comparatively examined in patients who had sustained either moderate-to-severe closed head injury (CHI) or spinal cord injury (SCI). Both groups experienced significant pre- to postinjury reductions in socioeconomic and employment status. In addition to cognitive dysfunction, the patients with CHI reported significantly greater depressive symptomotology, and a pattern of psychological adjustment characterized by greater chronic tension, social alienation, and moodiness. No differences were found between patients' reports of psychosocial functioning as assessed across a broad range of relevant dimensions that included the vocational, domestic, and social environments. In the group with CHI, memory dysfunction was consistently correlated with a broad range of psychological variables, including degree of depressive symptomotology and anxiety. Memory dysfunction was also the most significant correlate of long-term psychosocial adjustment for the patients with CHI; degree of depressive symptomotology, age at injury, and level of injury to the spinal cord were the most significant correlates for the patients with SCI. The relatives of the patients with CHI reported significantly greater patient dysfunction in the areas of vocational and social-role performance outside the home than did the patients themselves. The results are discussed in terms of the specific and the general long-term sequelae resulting from traumatic injury to the brain or spinal cord and associated implications for rehabilitation.
引用
收藏
页码:117 / 125
页数:9
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] LONG-TERM PSEUDOMONAS COLONIZATION IN SPINAL-CORD INJURY PATIENTS
    MONTGOMERIE, JZ
    MORROW, JW
    AMERICAN JOURNAL OF EPIDEMIOLOGY, 1980, 112 (04) : 508 - 517
  • [22] PSYCHOLOGICAL ADJUSTMENT FOLLOWING TRAUMATIC SPINAL-CORD INJURY - A STUDY USING THE PSYCHOSOCIAL ADJUSTMENT OT ILLNESS SCALE
    JUDD, FK
    WEBBER, JE
    BROWN, DJ
    NORMAN, TR
    BURROWS, GD
    PARAPLEGIA, 1991, 29 (03): : 173 - 179
  • [23] THE EFFECT OF AGING AND DURATION OF DISABILITY ON LONG-TERM HEALTH OUTCOMES FOLLOWING SPINAL-CORD INJURY
    PENTLAND, W
    MCCOLL, MA
    ROSENTHAL, C
    PARAPLEGIA, 1995, 33 (07): : 367 - 373
  • [24] LIFE STRESS AND PSYCHOLOGIC ADJUSTMENT FOLLOWING SPINAL-CORD INJURY
    FRANK, RG
    ELLIOTT, TR
    ARCHIVES OF PHYSICAL MEDICINE AND REHABILITATION, 1987, 68 (06): : 344 - 347
  • [26] PSYCHOSOCIAL ADJUSTMENT OF SPINAL-CORD INJURED INDIVIDUALS
    HARASYMIW, SJ
    MAYCLIN, DK
    DEXTER, WR
    THOMPSON, DD
    GORDON, WA
    ATHELSTAN, GT
    ARCHIVES OF PHYSICAL MEDICINE AND REHABILITATION, 1980, 61 (10): : 492 - 492
  • [27] LONG-TERM COMPLICATIONS FOLLOWING SPINAL CORD INJURY AND AGING
    Tarnacka, Beata
    Korczynski, Bogumil
    Frasunska, Justyna
    POSTEPY PSYCHIATRII I NEUROLOGII, 2020, 29 (04): : 234 - 245
  • [28] LONG-TERM SUPRAPUBIC CYSTOSTOMY DRAINAGE IN SPINAL-CORD INJURY PATIENTS
    HACKLER, RH
    BRITISH JOURNAL OF UROLOGY, 1982, 54 (02): : 120 - 121
  • [29] Cognitive function following long-term spinal cord injury
    Tun, CG
    Tun, PA
    Wingfield, A
    REHABILITATION PSYCHOLOGY, 1997, 42 (03) : 163 - 182
  • [30] PROGNOSTIC FACTORS FOR LONG-TERM SURVIVAL AFTER SPINAL-CORD INJURY
    DEVIVO, MJ
    AMERICAN JOURNAL OF EPIDEMIOLOGY, 1989, 130 (04) : 847 - 848