Trajectory of post-traumatic stress following traumatic injury: 6-year follow-up
- PMID: 25657356
- DOI: 10.1192/bjp.bp.114.145516
Trajectory of post-traumatic stress following traumatic injury: 6-year follow-up
Abstract
Background: Traumatic injuries affect millions of patients each year, and resulting post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) significantly contributes to subsequent impairment.
Aims: To map the distinctive long-term trajectories of PTSD responses over 6 years by using latent growth mixture modelling.
Method: Randomly selected injury patients (n = 1084) admitted to four hospitals around Australia were assessed in hospital, and at 3, 12, 24 and 72 months. Lifetime psychiatric history and current PTSD severity and funxctioning were assessed.
Results: Five trajectories of PTSD response were noted across the 6 years: (a) chronic (4%), (b) recovery (6%), (c) worsening/recovery (8%), (d) worsening (10%) and (e) resilient (73%). A poorer trajectory was predicted by female gender, recent life stressors, presence of mild traumatic brain injury and admission to intensive care unit.
Conclusions: These findings demonstrate the long-term PTSD effects that can occur following traumatic injury. The different trajectories highlight that monitoring a subset of patients over time is probably a more accurate means of identifying PTSD rather than relying on factors that can be assessed during hospital admission.
© The Royal College of Psychiatrists 2015.
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