Pre-Injury, Injury and Early Post-Injury Predictors of Long-Term Functional and Psychosocial Recovery After Severe Traumatic Brain Injury
- 1 September 2005
- journal article
- Published by CSIRO Publishing in Brain Impairment
- Vol. 6 (2) , 75-89
- https://doi.org/10.1375/brim.2005.6.2.75
Abstract
Background: Findings from prognostic studies of functional and psychosocial recovery after traumatic brain injury (TBI) reported to date have been limited by the restricted timeframe for prediction, generally within the first 5 years post-trauma. This investigation examined prediction of functional and psychosocial recovery in the medium-term (6 years post-trauma; Time 1) and long-term (23 years post-trauma; Time 2). Methods: The participants comprised a consecutive series of the first 100 patients with severe TBI receiving their primary rehabilitation at a regionally based unit. At the 23-year follow-up, 91% of the sample was traced: 17 had died, 5 declined participation, and 69 were interviewed, with 68 participating at both Time 1 and Time 2. Five outcome domains were examined: mobility, self-care, employability, relationships and living skills. Results: Very few of seven pre-injury variables were significantly correlated with any of the outcome variables. A series of logistic regression analyses successfully predicted levels of recovery in all domains using four predictor variables: pre-injury occupational status, duration of post-traumatic amnesia, and physical and neuropsychological disability at rehabilitation discharge. At Time 1, 60% or more of the variance was accounted for in four of the five domains, and at Time 2, more than 40% of the variance was accounted for in all domains. Sensitivity ranged from 62% (self-care) to 90% (mobility). With a single exception (employability at Time 2), specificity was also high, ranging from 80% (relationships) to 98% (mobility). Comparable accuracy rates were also found for positive and negative predictive power. Conclusions: These results demonstrate impressive predictive capacity of early post-trauma variables for the very long-term levels of recovery. They provide guidance for the tailoring of individual rehabilitation programs and the identification of people who may require special supports after rehabilitation discharge.Keywords
This publication has 55 references indexed in Scilit:
- Personality Factors and Injury Severity in the Prediction of Early and Late Traumatic Brain Injury Outcomes.Rehabilitation Psychology, 2004
- Comparison of the predictive power of socio-economic variables, severity of injury and age on long-term outcome of traumatic brain injury: sample-specific variables versus factors as predictorsBrain Injury, 2002
- Ecological validity of neuropsychological and other predictors following head injuryThe Clinical Neuropsychologist, 1996
- Psychosocial Adjustment Following Closed Head Injury: A Model for Understanding Individual Differences and Predicting OutcomeNeuropsychological Rehabilitation, 1996
- Prediction of employment status 2 years after traumatic brain injuryBrain Injury, 1995
- Prediction of psychosocial recovery after head injury with cognitive tests and neurobehavioral ratingsJournal of Clinical and Experimental Neuropsychology, 1994
- Predictors and indicators of work status after traumatic brain injury: A meta-analysisNeuropsychological Rehabilitation, 1993
- Predicting employment in traumatic brain injury following neuropsychological rehabilitationJournal of Head Trauma Rehabilitation, 1991
- Head injury, a multivariate study: Predicting long-term productivity and independent living outcomeBrain Injury, 1989
- ASSESSMENT OF OUTCOME AFTER SEVERE BRAIN DAMAGE: A Practical ScalePublished by Elsevier ,1975