One-year prospective follow-up of motor vehicle accident victims.

Author(s)
Blanchard, E.B. Hickling, E.J. Barton, K.A. Taylor, A.E. Loos, W.R. & Jones Alexander, J.
Year
Abstract

One hundred and thirty-two victims of motor vehicle accidents (MVAs), who sought medical attention as a result of the MVA, were assessed at three points in time: 1-4 months post-MVA, 6 months later, and 12 months later. Of the 48 who met the full criteria for Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) initially, half had remitted at least in part by the 6-month follow-up point and two-thirds had remitted by the 1-year follow-up. Using logistic regression, 3 variables combined to correctly identify 79% of remitters and non-remitters at the 12-month follow-up point: initial scores on the irritability and foreshortened future symptoms of PTSD and the initial degree of vulnerability the subject felt in a motor vehicle after the MVA. Four variables combinedgg to predict 64% of the variance in the degree of post-traumatic stress symptoms at 12 months: presence of alcohol abuse and/or an Axis-II disorder at the time of the initial assessment as well as the total scores on the hyperarousel and on avoidance symptoms of PTSD present at the initial post-MVA assessment. (A)

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Publication

Library number
970285 ST [electronic version only]
Source

Behaviour Research and Therapy, Vol. 34 (1996), No. 10 (October), p. 775-786, 28 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.