Daniel W Klyce1, Charles H Bombardier2, Trevor J Davis2, Narineh Hartoonian2, Jeanne M Hoffman2, Jesse R Fann3, Claire Z Kalpakjian4. 1. Department of Rehabilitation Medicine, University of Washington School of Medicine, Seattle, WA. Electronic address: dwklyce@vcu.edu. 2. Department of Rehabilitation Medicine, University of Washington School of Medicine, Seattle, WA. 3. Department of Rehabilitation Medicine, University of Washington School of Medicine, Seattle, WA; Department of Psychiatry, University of Washington School of Medicine, Seattle, WA. 4. Department of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, University of Michigan School of Medicine, Ann Arbor, MI.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To examine whether grief is a psychometrically sound construct that is distinct from depression in individuals who have recently sustained a spinal cord injury (SCI). DESIGN: Cross-sectional survey. SETTING: Inpatient rehabilitation units at 3 geographically diverse, university-affiliated medical centers. PARTICIPANTS: Patients with SCI (N=206) were recruited (163 men [79.1%]). Most patients were non-Hispanic whites (n=175 [85.0%]). Most patients sustained a cervical SCI (n=134 [64.4%]). Various injury etiologies were represented, with the majority being accounted for by falls (n=72 [31.5%]) and vehicle-related accidents (n=69 [33.5%]). The mean time since injury was 53.5±40.5 days. INTERVENTIONS: Not applicable. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: An adapted version of the 12-item structured clinical interview for Prolonged Grief Disorder was used to assess symptoms of grief, and the Patient Health Questionnaire-9 was used to measure depression. Demographic and injury-related data were also collected. RESULTS: A principal component analysis (with direct oblimin rotation) of the grief measure suggested a 2-component solution. The content of items loading on the separate components suggested 2 subscales: loss (6 items; Cronbach α=.810) and trauma (6 items; Cronbach α=.823). Follow-up principal component analyses including both grief and depression measures suggested clear differentiation of grief-related loss from depression. The prevalence of clinically significant levels of grief was low (6%), and levels of depression were consistent with previous findings related to inpatient rehabilitation (23.5%). CONCLUSIONS: The items used to assess grief symptoms in patients participating in inpatient rehabilitation for recently sustained SCI appear to capture a psychometrically reliable construct that is distinct from that of depression. Research is needed on the predictive validity of early grief symptoms after SCI and the relation of grief to other psychological constructs over time.
OBJECTIVE: To examine whether grief is a psychometrically sound construct that is distinct from depression in individuals who have recently sustained a spinal cord injury (SCI). DESIGN: Cross-sectional survey. SETTING: Inpatient rehabilitation units at 3 geographically diverse, university-affiliated medical centers. PARTICIPANTS: Patients with SCI (N=206) were recruited (163 men [79.1%]). Most patients were non-Hispanic whites (n=175 [85.0%]). Most patients sustained a cervical SCI (n=134 [64.4%]). Various injury etiologies were represented, with the majority being accounted for by falls (n=72 [31.5%]) and vehicle-related accidents (n=69 [33.5%]). The mean time since injury was 53.5±40.5 days. INTERVENTIONS: Not applicable. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: An adapted version of the 12-item structured clinical interview for Prolonged Grief Disorder was used to assess symptoms of grief, and the Patient Health Questionnaire-9 was used to measure depression. Demographic and injury-related data were also collected. RESULTS: A principal component analysis (with direct oblimin rotation) of the grief measure suggested a 2-component solution. The content of items loading on the separate components suggested 2 subscales: loss (6 items; Cronbach α=.810) and trauma (6 items; Cronbach α=.823). Follow-up principal component analyses including both grief and depression measures suggested clear differentiation of grief-related loss from depression. The prevalence of clinically significant levels of grief was low (6%), and levels of depression were consistent with previous findings related to inpatient rehabilitation (23.5%). CONCLUSIONS: The items used to assess grief symptoms in patients participating in inpatient rehabilitation for recently sustained SCI appear to capture a psychometrically reliable construct that is distinct from that of depression. Research is needed on the predictive validity of early grief symptoms after SCI and the relation of grief to other psychological constructs over time.