1. Post‐traumatic growth and its explanatory factors in burn patients: A systematic review.
- Author
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Kazemi‐Sufi, Siamak, Bagheri, Ayub, Mazhari, Seyed Amirhossein, Farhadi, Bahar, Alizadeh‐Otaghvar, Hamidreza, Zaboli Mahdiabadi, Morteza, Najafi, Masoomeh, Farzan, Ramyar, and Salehi, Reza
- Subjects
BURNS & scalds ,POSTTRAUMATIC growth ,PSYCHOLOGICAL adaptation ,SEVERITY of illness index ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,BURN patients ,MEDLINE ,QUALITY of life ,SPIRITUALITY ,ONLINE information services ,SOCIAL support ,MENTAL depression ,HOPE - Abstract
A few studies have examined post‐traumatic growth (PTG) after burns, a relatively new area of research. To understand how to promote PTG in burn survivors, we need to know how PTG and coping are presented, how they change over time, and the components that influence development. Based on the criteria of the PRISMA statement, we conducted our initial search on 1 February 2023. This study systematically reviewed relevant studies in five PubMed, Web of Science, Google Scholar, Scopus and Science Direct search databases. The search used the following keywords: Post‐traumatic Growth, Psychological Growth, Post‐traumatic Growth, Psychological, PTG, Burns and Burn. The two researchers evaluated the quality of the included studies using a 20‐item tool called the appraisal tool for cross‐sectional studies (AXIS tool). A total of 1396 burn patients participated in 12 studies. Among the studies included in this systematic review, seven were cross‐sectional, and five were cohort. The average age of the patients in this study was 35.77 (SD = 10.19). Among the participants, 52.4% were men. The total body surface area (TBSA) percentage in these patients was 32.77 (SD = 16.42). The mean of PTG inventory (PTGI) was 54.08 (SD = 20.46) out of 105, which is a moderate level. Factors such as coping strategies, perceived social support, TBSA, religion/spirituality and severity of burn are positive factors for PTG in burn survivors. Also, factors such as depression, post‐traumatic stress disorder and physical and mental recovery are negative factors for PTG in burn survivors. These factors can be improved through targeted intervention strategies, including overall function, quality of life, social support, optimism, hope and new opportunities. There is a need for further research in several areas related to growth, intervention and measurement. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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