Post-traumatic stress disorder in serious accidental injury: 3-Year follow-up study

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Abstract

Background: Long-term data on post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) following accidents are scarce. Aims: To assess and predict PTSD in people 3 years after severe accidental injury. Method: Severely injured patients were recruited consecutively from the intensive care unit (n=121) and assessed within 1 month of the trauma. Follow-up interviews were conducted 6 months, 12 months and 36 months later; 90 patients participated in all four interviews. Symptoms were assessed using the Clinician-Administered PTSD Scale. Results: Post-traumatic stress disorder was diagnosed in 6% of patients 2 weeks after the accident, in 2% after 1 year and in 4% after 3 years. Robust predictors of later PTSD symptom level were intrusive symptoms shortly after the accident and biographical risk factors. There were individual changes over time between the categories PTSD, sub-threshold PTSD and no PTSD. Whereas PTSD symptom severity was low or decreased for most of the patients, some of them showed an increase or a delayed onset. Patients with persisting PTSD symptoms at 6 months and patients with delayed onset of symptoms are at risk of long-term PTSD. Conclusions: The prevalence of PTSD was low over the whole period of 3 years.

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APA

Hepp, U., Moergeli, H., Buchi, S., Bruchhaus-Steinert, H., Kraemer, B., Sensky, T., & Schnyder, U. (2008). Post-traumatic stress disorder in serious accidental injury: 3-Year follow-up study. British Journal of Psychiatry, 192(5), 376–383. https://doi.org/10.1192/bjp.bp.106.030569

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