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1.
Research has documented elevated levels of depression and suicide in the spinal cord injured (SCI) population, with the majority of suicide attempts occurring within 12 months of injury onset. Social support has been linked with depression and suicidal intent, and this study aimed to determine the impact of the quality and quantity of social support on levels of depression and hopelessness, an indirect indicator of suicide risk in the SCI population. Fifty-three individuals with traumatic SCI at Week 6 of their rehabilitation, and 42 at Week 18, with an approximate male to female ratio of 4:1, completed the Beck Depression Inventory (BDI), Beck Hopelessness Scale (BHS), and Social Support Questionnaire. Stepwise multiple regression analyses revealed that high quality of social support was associated with low hopelessness and depression scores, being more pronounced at Week 18 postinjury. The impact of social support on psychological well-being demonstrates the importance of fostering and integrating social support in rehabilitation following spinal cord injury.  相似文献   

2.
Studies of perception have focussed on sensation, though more recently the perception of action has, once more, become the subject of investigation. These studies have looked at acute experimental situations. The present paper discusses the subjective experience of those with either clinical syndromes of loss of movement or sensation (spinal cord injury, sensory neuronopathy syndrome or motor stroke), or with experimental paralysis or sensory loss. The differing phenomenology of these is explored and their effects on intention and agency discussed. It is shown that sensory loss can have effects on the focussing of motor command and that for some a sense of agency can return despite paralysis.
Jonathan ColeEmail:
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3.
Associations between body region injured and psychosocial outcomes may have implications for injury prevention and mitigation strategies. The present study investigated the association of body-region—specific injuries and their association with 3 psychosocial outcomes (i.e., quality of life, QOL; posttraumatic stress disorder, PTSD; and depression) among a large sample of U.S. military service members injured in combat. A total of 1,011 individuals wounded in combat enrolled in the Wounded Warrior Recovery Project and provided QOL, depression, and PTSD measures on a Web-based survey. These psychosocial variables were linked with the presence/absence of combat injuries in 9 different body regions (head, face, neck, thorax, spine, abdomen, upper extremity, lower extremity, and external skin/other), as well as overall injury severity and demographic factors. Two-step hierarchical linear regressions revealed that after adjusting for overall injury severity and time since injury, those with combat-related head and spine injuries were particularly at risk for relatively worse psychosocial outcomes. Head and spinal injuries were associated with lower QOL and higher PTSD and depression. Overall, even those with relatively minor injuries may be at risk of lower QOL and adverse psychosocial outcomes. These findings may highlight the need for early interventions to minimize the psychological effects of combat injuries to the head and spine.  相似文献   

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