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Journal Article

Citation

Putzke JD, Barrett JJ, Richards JS, Underhill AT, Lobello SG. J. Spinal Cord Med. 2004; 27(2): 106-110.

Affiliation

Department of Neurology, Mayo Clinic, Jacksonville, Florida, USA.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2004, Academy of Spinal Cord Injury Professionals, Publisher Maney Publishing)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

15162879

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To determine the course of self-reported life satisfaction in a spinal cord injury (SCI) cohort. DESIGN: Prospective study using longitudinal data from the Injury Control Research Center. PARTICIPANTS: Adult persons with traumatic-onset SCI (n = 207) evaluated at 1, 2, 4, and 5 years postinjury using the Life Satisfaction Index-A. RESULTS: A nonsignificant (P > 0.05) main effect of time was found using a repeated-measures analysis controlling for education and employment status. Several methods were used that provided a range of liberal to conservative estimates for missing data (ie, 38% retention rate at year 5). Subsequent missing data analyses tended to corroborate the finding of a nonsignificant effect of time, although the most conservative methods showed a significant decrease in life satisfaction between year 1 and year 5 postinjury (P < 0.05). Examination of numerous demographic, injury, and treatment-related characteristics at each follow-up time point suggested that the main findings of the study were not merely the result of differential dropout rates. CONCLUSION: Life satisfaction after the first year of injury remains largely the same over the next 4 years. Methodologic and analytic recommendations are discussed.


Language: en

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