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Journal Article

Citation

Edwards-Stewart A, Smolenski DJ, Peters ZJ, Quah RF, Bush NE, Campbell MS, Skopp NA, Belsher BE, Kennedy CH. Clin. Neuropsychol. 2020; ePub(ePub): ePub.

Affiliation

Psychological Health Center of Excellence, Silver Spring, MD, USA.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2020, Informa - Taylor and Francis Group)

DOI

10.1080/13854046.2020.1713399

PMID

31985330

Abstract

Objective: Prior research indicates that there is an additive association between traumatic brain injury and mental health diagnoses on health-care utilization. This assumed additivity has not been formally assessed. The objective of this study was to estimate additive and multiplicative interactions associated with mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI) and pre-existing health conditions.Method: Active-duty military patient records over a nine-year period were sampled within four exposure groups (N = 4500 per group) defined jointly by incident mTBI and pre-existing mental health diagnoses. Outpatient and inpatient health encounters were compared between the four exposure groups using generalized linear models for count and proportion outcomes. Additive interactions were estimated using the interaction contrast ratio. Multiplicative interactions were estimated as a product term in the generalized linear models.Results: The joint association of mTBI and pre-existing mental health diagnoses with health-care utilization, overall, was less than multiplicative and greater than additive. Patients with both exposures experienced more health-care utilization than expected under the assumed additivity (independence) of the two exposures. PTSD and anxiety diagnoses were the MH diagnoses associated with the largest interaction contrast values specific to total outpatient encounters.Conclusions: Studies of the interaction of two diagnoses on subsequent health-care utilization should examine both additive and multiplicative interactions. The greater-than-additive findings in this study indicate that there may be synergy, for at least some patients, between mTBI injury and mental health that complicates the treatment course.


Language: en

Keywords

Department of Defense; health-care utilization; mental health disorders; mild traumatic brain injury; service members

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