1. Unravelling the impact of prior depression and trauma-related cognitive processes on depression following trauma: A 2-year prospective study of burn survivors.
- Author
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Su, Yi-Jen and Liang, Sophie Hsin-Yi
- Subjects
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POST-traumatic stress disorder , *MENTAL depression risk factors , *WOUNDS & injuries , *TAIWANESE people , *RISK assessment , *BURNS & scalds , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *ANXIETY , *DISEASE prevalence , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *LONGITUDINAL method , *MENTAL depression , *COGNITION - Abstract
Individuals with severe burn injuries may develop depression, yet knowledge about psychological risk factors for depression following trauma is limited. This study investigated the prospective impact and interplay of prior depression and trauma-related cognitive processes (posttraumatic negative appraisals and trauma-related rumination) to depressive symptoms between 6 and 24 months after burn injury. Taiwanese adult survivors of burn (N = 118) participated in surveys immediately post-burn and at 6-, 12-, and 24-months follow-up. Participants were 7 5% men, with an average age of 41.8 years and an average of TBSA of 18.3%. A total of 8.5%, 5.9%, and 4.2% met criteria for probable major depression at 6, 12, and 24 months post-burn, respectively. The prevalence increased to 23.7%, 11.0%, and 5.9% using the cutoff on the PHQ-9. Prior depression and trauma-related cognitive processes immediately post-burn explained 13.5%, 20.5%, and 18.6% of the variance in depressive symptoms at 6, 12, and 24 months post-burn, respectively. Posttraumatic negative appraisals strongly predicted depressive symptoms post-burn across follow-ups. Moreover, posttraumatic negative appraisals significantly mediated the effect of prior depression on subsequent depressive symptoms across follow-ups. Prior depression significantly moderated the effect of trauma-related rumination on depressive symptoms at 6 months post-burn. Our results are the first to demonstrate the role and interplay of prior depression and trauma-related cognitive processes in post-burn depression. Findings highlight that pre-and post-trauma psychological factors jointly affect depression following trauma, broadening the applicability of cognitive theories of PTSD. • This study examined the contribution effect of early psychological risk factors to post-burn depressive symptoms. • Depression is relatively common at 6 months post-burn and then gradually decreased. • Posttraumatic negative appraisals strongly predicted depressive symptoms between 6 and 24 months post-burn. • Posttraumatic negative appraisals mediated the effect of prior depression on long-term depressive symptoms after burn. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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