Authors

  1. Erler, Kimberly S. PhD
  2. Juengst, Shannon B. PhD
  3. Whiteneck, Gale G. PhD
  4. Locascio, Joseph J. PhD
  5. Bogner, Jennifer A. PhD
  6. Kaminski, Jamie BS
  7. Giacino, Joseph T. PhD

Abstract

Objective: To determine whether rehospitalization during the first 2 years after moderate to severe traumatic brain injury (TBI) is associated with poor participation at 5 years post-TBI, after controlling for demographic and severity factors.

 

Setting: TBI Model Systems Program.

 

Participants: Community-dwelling individuals with TBI, 16 years or older (n = 1940).

 

Design: Retrospective data analysis of a multicenter prospective study.

 

Main Measures: Participation Assessment with Recombined Tools-Objective (PART-O).

 

Results: After controlling for demographic and severity factors, a general linear model indicated that rehospitalization status (ie, never rehospitalized during years 1 and 2, rehospitalized either during year 1 or 2, or rehospitalized during both years 1 and 2) predicted less participation at 5 years post-TBI (P = .0353). The PART-O scores were in the hypothesized direction, with the lowest covariate-adjusted mean participation score found for the group with rehospitalizations during both years and the highest covariate-adjusted mean participation score found in the group with no rehospitalizations. Examining total number of rehospitalizations during years 1 and 2, rather than rehospitalization status, yielded analogous results (P = .0148).

 

Conclusions: This study suggests that rehospitalization in the first 2 years after TBI is negatively associated with participation at 5 years after injury. Since participation is considered a key indicator of successful TBI rehabilitation, minimizing the need for rehospitalizations and promoting health in the community setting should be a priority of postacute care for individuals with TBI.