Prediction of employment status 2 years after traumatic brain injury
- 1 January 1995
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Brain Injury
- Vol. 9 (1) , 11-20
- https://doi.org/10.3109/02699059509004566
Abstract
The present study used a multivariate approach to investigate which of a range of variables relating to demographic factors, injury severity and degree of disability on admission to rehabilitation were the best predictors of employment status 2 years after traumatic brain injury (TBI). Subjects were 74 TBI patients who had been working prior to injury, had undergone rehabilitation at Bethesda Hospital and attended a review clinic 2 years after injury. A cross-validation sample consisted of a further 50 such subjects. Following preliminary analysis four input variables were selected: age under or over 40 at time of injury, Glasgow Coma Scale score on acute hospital admission, duration of post-traumatic amnesia and total score on the Disability Rating Scale (DRS) on admission to rehabilitation. Stepwise discriminant function analysis resulted in a discriminant function consisting of three variables—total score on the Disability Rating Scale, Glasgow Coma Scale Score and age—which correctly classified 74% of grouped cases. A second analysis using the original discriminant function correctly classified 68% of the cross-validation sample. Chi-square analysis showed no significant difference between these results, thus confirming these variables, in combination, as predictors of employment status 2 years after TBI.Keywords
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