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Journal Article

Citation

DeMatteo CA, Hanna SE, Yousefi-Nooraie R, Lin CY, Mahoney WJ, Law MC, McCauley D. Brain Inj. 2014; 28(1): 114-121.

Affiliation

School of Rehabilitation Science .

Copyright

(Copyright © 2014, Informa - Taylor and Francis Group)

DOI

10.3109/02699052.2013.848380

PMID

24328806

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: Little is known about the impact of acquired brain injury (ABI) on the long-term quality-of-life (QoL) in children and youth. The objectives of this study were to illustrate the long-term QoL trajectories at 5 years post-ABI. METHODS: The QoL of children between 5-18 years (nā€‰=ā€‰94) admitted to McMaster Children's Hospital with ABI were assessed longitudinally for a minimum of 5 years post-injury using the Child Health Questionnaire. Independent t-tests were used to examine differences in QoL between the study cohort and a normative sample at different time points. Mixed-effects models were used to identify predictors for QoL. RESULTS: The QoL of children with ABI was significantly poorer (pā€‰<ā€‰0.05) than the normative data on all domains and at all-time points except at baseline. The CHQ physical summary score (PHSS) showed a significant decline immediately after injury and a significant recovery at 8 months post-injury; while the CHQ psychosocial summary score (PSSS) showed a significant immediate decline, which remained over the course of the study. Pre-morbid school record, time post-injury and mechanism of injury significantly predicted the CHQ PSSS. CONCLUSIONS: QoL is impacted by ABI regardless of severity. This impact is further affected by time post-injury.


Language: en

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