Literature DB >> 17215744

Functional outcome at 2.5, 5, 9, and 24 months after injury in the Netherlands.

Suzanne Polinder1, Ed F van Beeck, Marie Louise Essink-Bot, Hidde Toet, Caspar W N Looman, Saakje Mulder, Willem Jan Meerding.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: The collection of empirical data on the frequency, severity, and duration of functioning is a prerequisite to identify patient groups with long term or permanent disability.
METHODS: We fielded postal questionnaires in a stratified sample of 8,564 injury patients aged 15 years and older, who had visited an emergency department in the Netherlands. Measurements were at 2.5, 5, 9, and 24 months after the injury and included a generic health status classification (EQ-5D), socio-demographic, and medical information. We analyzed determinants of long-term functional outcome by multivariate regression analysis.
RESULTS: Five months after the injury health status of nonhospitalized injury patients was comparable to the general population's health (EQ-5D summary measure 0.87). Health status of patients admitted for 3 days or less improved until 9 months (0.82). For those admitted more than 3 days health status improved until 24 months (0.48 toward 0.67), but remained below population norms. Hospitalization, age and sex (females), type of injury (spinal cord injury, hip fracture, and lower extremity injury), and comorbidity were significant predictors of poor functioning in the long term.
CONCLUSIONS: Recovery patterns vary widely between nonhospitalized, shortly, and long hospitalized injury patients. Nonhospitalized injury patients recover within 5 months from an injury whereas a considerable group of hospitalized injury patients suffer from persistent health problems. Our study indicates the importance of health monitoring with an adapted longitudinal design for injury patients. The time intervals used should match the various stages of the recovery process, which depends on the severity of the injury studied.

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Year:  2007        PMID: 17215744     DOI: 10.1097/TA.0b013e31802b71c9

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Trauma        ISSN: 0022-5282


  56 in total

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7.  Alternative approaches to derive disability weights in injuries: do they make a difference?

Authors:  Juanita A Haagsma; S Polinder; E F van Beeck; S Mulder; G J Bonsel
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8.  Integrating health-related quality of life with sickness leave days for return-to-work assessment in traumatic limb injuries.

Authors:  Wen-Hsuan Hou; Huey-Wen Liang; Ching-Lin Hsieh; Ching-Fan Sheu; Jing-Shiang Hwang; Hung-Yi Chuang
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9.  Health-related quality of life and recovery patterns among hospitalised injury patients in Vietnam.

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