Acute stress response patterns to accidental injuries.

Author(s)
Schnyder, U. & Malt, U.F.
Year
Abstract

The authors examined, by means of clinical interviews and several self-report measures (IES, STAI), 110 accident victims' primary appraisal of injury during five different time points before, during, and immediately after the accident. The appraisals were combined with the corresponding most dominant emotion in a matrix, revealing six different acute stress response patterns: ordinary (0: 64 subjects-58%); emotional (E: 19 subjects-17%); controlled (C: 9 subjects-8%); derealization (D: 15 subjects-14%); and denial-elation (DE: 3 subjects-3%). The E response pattern was associated with being female (RR 3.31). Psychopathology at the time of the injury or risk of death during the accident increased the risk for a D or E response (RR 1.61 and RR 1.92, respectively). The presence of psychophysiological symptoms or reduced appetite during the hospital stay was associated with E, C, or D response patterns compared with an 0 pattern (RR 1.76 and RR 2.18, respectively). A DE response was associated with severe brain injury partly undetected by the surgeons. The authors conclude that the identification of different clinical response patterns may be a meaningful approach to better tailor response-specific interventions for trauma victims. (A)

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Publication

Library number
990850 ST [electronic version only]
Source

Journal of Psychosomatic Research, Vol. 45 (1998), No. 5 (May), p. 419-424, 30 ref.

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This publication is one of our other publications, and part of our extensive collection of road safety literature, that also includes the SWOV publications.