Keywords

brain injury, depression, impaired self-awareness, rehabilitation

 

Authors

  1. Malec, James F. PhD
  2. Testa, Julie A. PhD
  3. Rush, Beth K. PhD
  4. Brown, Allen W. MD
  5. Moessner, Anne M. MSN, RN

Abstract

Objective: To identify patient features associated with early and late depression after traumatic brain injury (TBI).

 

Participants: 3 clinical trauma groups (mild TBI, moderate-severe TBI, orthopedic injury) and their significant others.

 

Measures: Preinjury: age, education, substance abuse, and psychiatric history; Injury severity: classification using Glasgow Coma Scale and cranial CT scan, posttraumatic amnesia; Early impairment: Neurobehavioral Functioning Inventory (NFI), Impaired Self-Awareness (ISA); Social and family support: Multidimensional Scale of Perceived Social Support, Family Assessment Device; Depression: NFI Depression Scale.

 

Method: Regression analyses of predictor variables on early and late measures of depression.

 

Results: Depression rates did not differ among the 3 trauma groups. Preinjury level of education, previous psychiatric history, and perceived level of social support explained a small portion of the variance in depressive symptoms. Patients' self-assessment of their impairment at discharge was most strongly correlated with both early and late depression. ISA was associated with reduced self-report of depressive symptoms. However, when those with ISA were excluded from the analysis, self-assessment of impairment remained strongly associated with depression.

 

Conclusions: Patients' self-assessment of impairment is strongly associated with early and late depression. Presence and severity of TBI does not appear to play a direct role in depression but does appear related to ISA, which serves as a barrier to the development of depression. Focusing on impairment appears to be a cardinal feature of depression in both patients with TBI and an orthopedic trauma group.