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Journal Article

Citation

Lukow HR, Godwin EE, Marwitz JH, Mills A, Hsu NH, Kreutzer JS. J. Head Trauma Rehabil. 2015; 30(4): 241-248.

Affiliation

Departments of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation (Drs Lukow, Godwin, Mills, and Hsu and Ms Marwitz) and Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, Neurological Surgery, and Psychiatry (Dr Kreutzer), Virginia Commonwealth University, Richmond.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2015, Lippincott Williams and Wilkins)

DOI

10.1097/HTR.0000000000000137

PMID

25931185

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To examine the relationship between resilience, psychological distress, adjustment, and community participation after traumatic brain injury (TBI). SETTING: Large university health system. PARTICIPANTS: Adult survivors of mild to severe TBI (N = 96).

DESIGN: Descriptive, preliminary. MAIN MEASURES: The Connor-Davidson Resilience Scale (10-item version) was used to assess resilience, the Brief Symptom Inventory (BSI-18) was used to characterize psychological distress, and the Mayo-Portland Adaptability Index (MPAI-4) was used to measure ability, adjustment, and participation.

RESULTS: Resilience scores were substantially lower than those of the general population. Significant relationships were found between resilience, psychological distress, and adjustment. Partial correlations (adjusting for the other MPAI-4 indices) showed significant correlation (P <.05) between MPAI-4 Adjustment and resilience. Partial correlations (adjusting for the other BSI-18 scales) also showed significance for Depression (P <.01) and resilience. Resilience scores differed significantly (P <.001) between individuals meeting BSI-18 caseness criteria for psychological distress (n = 55) and those not meeting criteria (n = 41).

CONCLUSIONS: Individuals with TBI are at risk for low resilience, which was found to correlate with psychological distress and psychosocial maladjustment. Developing interventions to strengthen resilience skills has the potential to improve postinjury psychosocial adjustment, an important area for future research.


Language: en

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