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Four Questions Nurses Can Ask to Predict PTSD 1 Year After a Motor Vehicle Crash

Authors :
Arnaud Leroy
Olivier Cottencin
Julien Labreuche
Pauline Mascarel
Marie-Atéa De Pourtales
Sylvie Molenda
Virgine Paget
Cédric Lemogne
Thierry Bougerol
Thomas Gregory
Christophe Chantelot
Anne-Laure Demarty
Samantha Meyer
Frédérique Warembourg
Stephane Duhem
Guillaume Vaiva
Source :
Journal of Trauma Nursing. 29:70-79
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health), 2022.

Abstract

The role of nurses in screening for posttraumatic stress disorder is crucial in trauma units.To create and evaluate an easy and brief tool for nurses to predict chronic posttraumatic stress disorder 1 year after a motor vehicle crash.We performed a 1-year follow-up multicenter study from 2007 to 2015, including 274 patients injured in a motor vehicle crash who were hospitalized in an orthopedic trauma unit. Nurses administered the DEPITAC questionnaire. Posttraumatic stress disorder was measured by the Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder Checklist of symptoms during the first year following the crash. A multivariable logistic regression model was implemented to select items significantly associated with posttraumatic stress disorder to improve the DEPITAC questionnaire. Predictive performance to predict posttraumatic stress disorder 1 year after the motor vehicle crash was examined for these different models.Of 274 patients studied, a total of 75.9% completed the questionnaire at 1 year of follow-up. We found that only two questions and two simple elements of the patient's medical record (other injury or a person dying during the crash, perception of vital threat, number of children, and length of stay in trauma) predicted posttraumatic stress disorder 1 year after a motor vehicle crash.The brevity of this evaluation, simple scoring rules, and screening test performance suggest that this new screening tool can be easily administered in the acute care setting by nurses.

Details

ISSN :
10787496
Volume :
29
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Trauma Nursing
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....13a7b6701c229ce39c97bc066609a341