The Burn Victim—A Review of Psychosocial Issues
- 1 December 1986
- journal article
- review article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Australian & New Zealand Journal of Psychiatry
- Vol. 20 (4) , 413-420
- https://doi.org/10.3109/00048678609158894
Abstract
Over recent decades, with the introduction of specialist units for the treatment of severely burnt patients, a volume of literature on psychological aspects of burns has accumulated, containing anecdote and opinion as well as research of varying quality. This literature is reviewed under three headings: epidemiology and prevention; reactions following acute hospitalisation; and long-term outcomes. Adverse personal, health, and social factors may predispose to burn injury. In hospital, the psychological course of the patient proceeds in stages that can be related to the well-recognised reactions to loss and overwhelming stress, modified by the major physiological insult. Reactions of family and staff are of great significance. In the longer term, rehabilitation prospects are generally good, although recovery may be complicated by a gradually subsiding level of neurotic symptoms and relationship difficulties.Keywords
This publication has 51 references indexed in Scilit:
- The Stress Response Rating Scale: A clinician's measure for rating the response to serious life‐eventsBritish Journal of Clinical Psychology, 1984
- Mea culpa? A study of the relationships among personality traits, life‐events and ascribed accident causationBritish Journal of Clinical Psychology, 1983
- An analysis of factors which predict mortality in hospitalized burn patientsBurns, 1982
- Self-inflicted burnsBurns, 1982
- Behavioural changes in burned adult patients during their stay in hospitalBurns, 1982
- Long-term psychosocial follow-up studies of burned adults: review of the literatureBurns, 1980
- The burn victim: his psychosocial profile and post-injury careerBurns, 1978
- The total number of burn injuries in a Scandinavian population: a repeated estimateBurns, 1978
- Psychiatric Treatment of Severely Burned AdultsPsychosomatics, 1973
- The Psychological Reaction to Severe BurnsPsychosomatics, 1971