Tsai I-Hsuan, Graves Daniel E, Chan Wenyaw, Darkoh Charles, Lee Meei-Shyuan, Pompeii Lisa A
School of Public Health, National Defense Medical Center.
Department of Neurological Surgery/Division of Physical Medicine & Rehabilitation, The University of Louisville.
Rehabil Psychol. 2017 Feb;62(1):36-44. doi: 10.1037/rep0000117. Epub 2017 Jan 2.
The study aimed to examine the relationship between environmental barriers and social participation among individuals with spinal cord injury (SCI).
Individuals admitted to regional centers of the Model Spinal Cord Injury System in the United States due to traumatic SCI were interviewed and included in the National Spinal Cord Injury Database. This cross-sectional study applied a secondary analysis with a mixed effect model on the data from 3,162 individuals who received interviews from 2000 through 2005. Five dimensions of environmental barriers were estimated using the short form of the Craig Hospital Inventory of Environmental Factors-Short Form (CHIEF-SF). Social participation was measured with the short form of the Craig Handicap Assessment and Reporting Technique-Short Form (CHART-SF) and their employment status.
Subscales of environmental barriers were negatively associated with the social participation measures. Each 1 point increase in CHIEF-SF total score (indicated greater environmental barriers) was associated with a 0.82 point reduction in CHART-SF total score (95% CI: -1.07, -0.57) (decreased social participation) and 4% reduction in the odds of being employed. Among the 5 CHIEF-SF dimensions, assistance barriers exhibited the strongest negative association with CHART-SF social participation score when compared to other dimensions, while work/school dimension demonstrated the weakest association with CHART-SF.
Environmental barriers are negatively associated with social participation in the SCI population. Working toward eliminating environmental barriers, especially assistance/service barriers, may help enhance social participation for people with SCI. (PsycINFO Database Record
本研究旨在探讨脊髓损伤(SCI)患者的环境障碍与社会参与之间的关系。
因创伤性脊髓损伤而入住美国脊髓损伤示范系统区域中心的患者接受了访谈,并被纳入国家脊髓损伤数据库。这项横断面研究对2000年至2005年期间接受访谈的3162名患者的数据进行了二次分析,并采用了混合效应模型。使用克雷格医院环境因素清单简表(CHIEF-SF)对环境障碍的五个维度进行评估。社会参与度通过克雷格残疾评估和报告技术简表(CHART-SF)及其就业状况进行衡量。
环境障碍的分量表与社会参与度指标呈负相关。CHIEF-SF总分每增加1分(表明环境障碍更大),CHART-SF总分就会降低0.82分(95%CI:-1.07,-0.57)(社会参与度降低),就业几率降低4%。在CHIEF-SF的5个维度中,与其他维度相比,协助障碍与CHART-SF社会参与度得分的负相关最强,而工作/学校维度与CHART-SF的相关性最弱。
环境障碍与脊髓损伤人群的社会参与呈负相关。努力消除环境障碍,尤其是协助/服务障碍,可能有助于提高脊髓损伤患者的社会参与度。(PsycINFO数据库记录)