Durber Chelsea M, Yeates Keith Owen, Taylor H Gerry, Walz Nicolay Chertkoff, Stancin Terry, Wade Shari L
Werklund School of Education, University of Calgary.
Department of Psychology, Alberta Children's Hospital Research Institute, University of Calgary.
Neuropsychology. 2017 Jul;31(5):499-507. doi: 10.1037/neu0000351. Epub 2017 May 25.
This study examined how the family environment predicts long-term academic and behavioral functioning in school following traumatic brain injury (TBI) in early childhood.
Using a concurrent cohort, prospective design, 15 children with severe TBI, 39 with moderate TBI, and 70 with orthopedic injury (OI) who were injured when they were 3-7 years of age were compared on tests of academic achievement and parent and teacher ratings of school performance and behavior on average 6.83 years postinjury. Soon after injury and at the longer term follow-up, families completed measures of parental psychological distress, family functioning, and quality of the home environment. Hierarchical linear regression analyses examined group differences in academic outcomes and their associations with measures of the early and later family environment.
The severe TBI group, but not the moderate TBI group, performed worse than did the OI group on all achievement tests, parent ratings of academic performance, and teacher ratings of internalizing problems. Higher quality early and late home environments predicted stronger academic skills and better classroom behavior for children with both TBI and OI. The early family environment more consistently predicted academic achievement, whereas the later family environment more consistently predicted classroom functioning. The quality of the home environment predicted academic outcomes more strongly than did parental psychological distress or family functioning.
TBI in early childhood has long-term consequences for academic achievement and school performance and behavior. Higher quality early and later home environments predict better school outcomes for both children with TBI and children with OI. (PsycINFO Database Record
本研究探讨了家庭环境如何预测幼儿创伤性脑损伤(TBI)后在学校的长期学业和行为表现。
采用同期队列前瞻性设计,对15名重度TBI儿童、39名中度TBI儿童和70名骨科损伤(OI)儿童进行比较,这些儿童在3至7岁时受伤,平均在受伤后6.83年接受学业成绩测试以及家长和教师对学校表现和行为的评分。受伤后不久以及在长期随访时,家庭完成了父母心理困扰、家庭功能和家庭环境质量的测量。分层线性回归分析检验了学业成绩的组间差异及其与早期和后期家庭环境测量指标的关联。
在所有成绩测试、家长对学业表现的评分以及教师对内化问题的评分方面,重度TBI组(而非中度TBI组)的表现比OI组差。更高质量的早期和后期家庭环境预示着TBI和OI儿童都有更强学业技能和更好的课堂行为。早期家庭环境更一致地预测学业成绩,而后期家庭环境更一致地预测课堂表现。家庭环境质量比父母心理困扰或家庭功能更强烈地预测学业成绩。
幼儿期TBI对学业成绩、学校表现和行为有长期影响。更高质量的早期和后期家庭环境预示着TBI儿童和OI儿童都有更好的学校成绩。(PsycINFO数据库记录