Profiles of psychological adaptation outcomes at discharge from spinal cord injury inpatient rehabilitation
Details
Serval ID
serval:BIB_47D7EB4F0899
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
Profiles of psychological adaptation outcomes at discharge from spinal cord injury inpatient rehabilitation
Journal
Archives of physical medicine and rehabilitation
Publication state
Published
Issued date
2019
Language
english
Abstract
OBJECTIVE:
To evaluate the effect of a newly acquired spinal cord injury (SCI) by identifying profiles of psychological adaptation outcomes at discharge from inpatient rehabilitation, using several outcome measures in parallel and to examine biopsychosocial factors associated with profile membership.
DESIGN:
Cross-sectional analysis of data from the Swiss Spinal Cord Injury inception cohort study.
SETTING:
Inpatient rehabilitation.
PARTICIPANTS:
Individuals 16 years old or older with recently diagnosed SCI who finished clinical rehabilitation in 1 of the 4 major national rehabilitation centers (N=370).
INTERVENTIONS:
Not applicable.
MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES:
Life satisfaction, general distress, and symptoms of depression and anxiety were assessed using a single item from the International SCI Quality of Life Basic Data Set, the Distress Thermometer, and the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale respectively.
RESULTS:
Using latent profile analysis, 4 profiles of psychological adaptation outcomes were identified displaying different levels of impact, ranging from Minimal to Severe. Regarding covariates associated with profile membership, higher optimism, purpose in life, and self-efficacy indicated a higher probability of having a Minimal impact profile. Additionally, males, individuals with better functional independence, and those with an absence of pain were more likely to show a Minimal impact profile.
CONCLUSIONS:
Among the participants, 70% showed Minimal or Low impact profiles. Our findings support that individuals can show positive responses across several outcome measures even at an early time after the injury onset (eg, at discharge from inpatient rehabilitation). Moreover, our results indicate that beyond functional independence, improvement, and pain management, a rehabilitation process that strengthens psychological resources might contribute to better adaptation outcomes.
To evaluate the effect of a newly acquired spinal cord injury (SCI) by identifying profiles of psychological adaptation outcomes at discharge from inpatient rehabilitation, using several outcome measures in parallel and to examine biopsychosocial factors associated with profile membership.
DESIGN:
Cross-sectional analysis of data from the Swiss Spinal Cord Injury inception cohort study.
SETTING:
Inpatient rehabilitation.
PARTICIPANTS:
Individuals 16 years old or older with recently diagnosed SCI who finished clinical rehabilitation in 1 of the 4 major national rehabilitation centers (N=370).
INTERVENTIONS:
Not applicable.
MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES:
Life satisfaction, general distress, and symptoms of depression and anxiety were assessed using a single item from the International SCI Quality of Life Basic Data Set, the Distress Thermometer, and the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale respectively.
RESULTS:
Using latent profile analysis, 4 profiles of psychological adaptation outcomes were identified displaying different levels of impact, ranging from Minimal to Severe. Regarding covariates associated with profile membership, higher optimism, purpose in life, and self-efficacy indicated a higher probability of having a Minimal impact profile. Additionally, males, individuals with better functional independence, and those with an absence of pain were more likely to show a Minimal impact profile.
CONCLUSIONS:
Among the participants, 70% showed Minimal or Low impact profiles. Our findings support that individuals can show positive responses across several outcome measures even at an early time after the injury onset (eg, at discharge from inpatient rehabilitation). Moreover, our results indicate that beyond functional independence, improvement, and pain management, a rehabilitation process that strengthens psychological resources might contribute to better adaptation outcomes.
Keywords
Emotional adjustment, Optimism, Rehabilitation, Spinal cord injuries
Create date
20/01/2020 11:29
Last modification date
03/08/2023 5:58