Monash-Epworth Rehabilitation Research Centre, Richmond, Victoria, Australia.
Turner Institute for Brain and Mental Health, School of Psychological Sciences, Monash University, Clayton, Victoria, Australia.
J Med Internet Res. 2024 Jan 29;26:e51245. doi: 10.2196/51245.
People with acquired brain injury (ABI) may be more susceptible to scams owing to postinjury cognitive and psychosocial consequences. Cyberscams result in financial loss and debilitating psychological impacts such as shame and mistrust, interference with neurorehabilitation, and reduced independence. Despite these significant consequences, there are no psychological treatments to support cyberscam survivors. There is limited evidence regarding how the current workforce is addressing post-ABI cyberscams.
This study aims to understand the perspectives and needs of clinicians and service providers in addressing post-ABI cyberscams.
Overall, 20 multidisciplinary clinicians and service providers were recruited through purposive sampling across Australia. Semistructured interviews explored post-ABI scam experiences and vulnerabilities, treatments and their efficacy, and recommendations for future cybersafety recovery interventions. Reflexive thematic analysis was used.
In total, 8 themes encompassing a biopsychosocial understanding of scam vulnerabilities and impacts were identified: "genuine lack of awareness: cognitive-executive difficulties"; "not coping with the loss of it all"; "needing trust and connection"; "strong reactions of trusted others"; "nothing structured to do"; "financial stress and independence"; "cyberability"; and "scammer persuasion." Each theme informed clinical recommendations including the need to provide psychological and cognitive support, enhance financial and cybersafety skills, promote meaningful social engagement, and foster collaboration between families and clinical support teams.
The multifaceted range of scam vulnerabilities and impacts highlighted the need for individualized, comprehensive, and targeted treatments using a biopsychosocial approach to enable cyberscam recovery among people with ABI. These findings will guide the development of a co-designed intervention.
由于受伤后的认知和心理社会后果,后天性脑损伤(ABI)患者可能更容易受到诈骗。网络诈骗会导致经济损失和严重的心理影响,如羞耻感和不信任感、干扰神经康复以及降低独立性。尽管这些后果严重,但目前没有心理治疗方法来支持网络诈骗幸存者。关于当前劳动力如何解决 ABI 后的网络诈骗问题,证据有限。
本研究旨在了解临床医生和服务提供者在解决 ABI 后网络诈骗问题方面的观点和需求。
总共通过澳大利亚的目的性抽样招募了 20 名多学科临床医生和服务提供者。半结构化访谈探讨了 ABI 后的诈骗经历和易感性、治疗方法及其疗效,以及对未来网络安全恢复干预措施的建议。使用了反思性主题分析。
共确定了 8 个主题,涵盖了对诈骗易感性和影响的生物心理社会理解:“真正缺乏意识:认知执行困难”;“无法应对失去一切”;“需要信任和联系”;“受信任的人强烈反应”;“没有结构可以做”;“经济压力和独立性”;“网络能力”和“骗子的说服力”。每个主题都提出了临床建议,包括提供心理和认知支持、增强财务和网络安全技能、促进有意义的社会参与以及促进家庭和临床支持团队之间的合作。
诈骗易感性和影响的多方面范围强调需要采用生物心理社会方法,为 ABI 患者提供个性化、全面和有针对性的治疗,以实现网络诈骗恢复。这些发现将指导联合设计干预措施的发展。