Demographic and cognitive predictors of long-term psychosocial outcome following traumatic brain injury

被引:130
|
作者
Wood, Rodger L. L. [1 ]
Rutterford, Neil A. [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Coll Swansea, Sch Human Sci, Dept Psychol, Swansea SA2 8PP, W Glam, Wales
关键词
brain injuries; outcome studies; demographic factors; neuropsychological tests; injury severity; social adjustment;
D O I
10.1017/S1355617706060498
中图分类号
R74 [神经病学与精神病学];
学科分类号
摘要
Demographic factors and cognitive impairment have been found previously to have associations with outcome after brain injury. Kendall and Terry (1996) suggest that preinjury psychosocial functioning, neurological factors, and cognitive impairment have a direct relationship with multidimensional psychosocial adjustment, but that cognitive impairment also has an indirect relationship by means of the mediation of appraisal and coping variables. The aim of this study was to explore these theoretical relationships at very late stages of recovery after brain injury. A total of 131 participants who were more than 10 years after injury (mean = 15.31 yr) completed a neuropsychological assessment, plus outcome measures that included employment status, community integration, life satisfaction, quality of life (QoL), and emotion. Results indicated that injury severity was predictive of life satisfaction; gender and relationship status predicted community integration; and age at injury predicted employment status. Impairment in working memory directly predicted all outcomes except QoL and anxiety. An indirect relationship was also evident between working memory, life satisfaction, and depression. Results partially support Kendall and Terry's model but the variables that significantly influence outcome seem to be determined by the outcome dimensions selected.
引用
收藏
页码:350 / 358
页数:9
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Hyperoxemia and long-term outcome after traumatic brain injury
    Rahul Raj
    Stepani Bendel
    Matti Reinikainen
    Riku Kivisaari
    Jari Siironen
    Maarit Lång
    Markus Skrifvars
    Critical Care, 17
  • [32] Long-term behavior problems following pediatric traumatic brain injury: Prevalence, predictors, and correlates
    Schwartz, L
    Taylor, HG
    Drotar, D
    Yeates, KO
    Wade, SL
    Stancin, T
    JOURNAL OF PEDIATRIC PSYCHOLOGY, 2003, 28 (04) : 251 - 263
  • [33] Brain biomarkers and pre-injury cognition are associated with long-term cognitive outcome in children with traumatic brain injury
    Amy A. Wilkinson
    Maureen Dennis
    Nevena Simic
    Margot J. Taylor
    Benjamin R. Morgan
    Helena Frndova
    Karen Choong
    Craig Campbell
    Douglas Fraser
    Vicki Anderson
    Anne-Marie Guerguerian
    Russell Schachar
    Jamie Hutchison
    BMC Pediatrics, 17
  • [34] Brain biomarkers and pre-injury cognition are associated with long-term cognitive outcome in children with traumatic brain injury
    Wilkinson, Amy A.
    Dennis, Maureen
    Simic, Nevena
    Taylor, Margot J.
    Morgan, Benjamin R.
    Frndova, Helena
    Choong, Karen
    Campbell, Craig
    Fraser, Douglas
    Anderson, Vicki
    Guerguerian, Anne-Marie
    Schachar, Russell
    Hutchison, Jamie
    BMC PEDIATRICS, 2017, 17
  • [35] Prediction of long-term productivity outcome following postacute traumatic brain injury rehabilitation.
    Bergloff, P
    Sherer, M
    High, W
    Gollaher, K
    Kearney, J
    ARCHIVES OF CLINICAL NEUROPSYCHOLOGY, 1997, 12 (04) : 288 - 288
  • [36] The Association of Age and Time Postinjury With Long-Term Emotional Outcome Following Traumatic Brain Injury
    Senathi-Raja, Dawn
    Ponsford, Jennie
    Schoenberger, Michael
    JOURNAL OF HEAD TRAUMA REHABILITATION, 2010, 25 (05) : 330 - 338
  • [37] CT AND MRI FINDINGS ARE NOT PREDICTIVE OF LONG-TERM OUTCOME FOLLOWING MILD TRAUMATIC BRAIN INJURY
    McMahon, Paul
    Puccio, Ava
    Pardini, Jamie
    Hricik, Allison
    Okonkwo, David O.
    JOURNAL OF NEUROTRAUMA, 2014, 31 (05) : A61 - A61
  • [38] Cognitive Reserve, Early Cognitive Screening, and Relationship to Long-Term Outcome after Severe Traumatic Brain Injury
    Ekdahl, Natascha
    Godbolt, Alison K.
    Deboussard, Catharina Nygren
    Lannsjo, Marianne
    Stalnacke, Britt-Marie
    Stenberg, Maud
    Ulfarsson, Trandur
    Moller, Marika C.
    JOURNAL OF CLINICAL MEDICINE, 2022, 11 (07)
  • [39] Psychosocial outcome risk indicator: predicting psychosocial outcome following traumatic brain injury
    Watts, R
    Perlesz, A
    BRAIN INJURY, 1999, 13 (02) : 113 - 124
  • [40] Agreement on and Predictors of Long-Term Psychosocial Development 16 Years Post-Childhood Traumatic Brain Injury
    Rosema, Stefanie
    Muscara, Frank
    Anderson, Vicki
    Godfrey, Celia
    Eren, Senem
    Catroppa, Cathy
    JOURNAL OF NEUROTRAUMA, 2014, 31 (10) : 899 - 905