Brier Zoe M F, Ruggiero Kenneth J, deRoon-Cassini Terri A, Espeleta Hannah C
Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Stanford University School of Medicine, Palo Alto, CA, USA.
College of Nursing, Medical University of South Carolina, Charleston, SC, USA.
Injury. 2025 May;56(5):112078. doi: 10.1016/j.injury.2024.112078. Epub 2024 Dec 11.
The American College of Surgeons now requires mental health screening and follow up for hospitalized patients in trauma centers. National estimates indicate that 20-40 % of these patients will develop posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and/or depression within one year post-injury. Research has identified brief bedside screens that predict PTSD and depression post-discharge, such as the Injured Trauma Survivor Screen and Peritraumatic Distress Inventory. However, false negatives are common; almost a quarter of patients with a negative bedside risk screen may develop PTSD or depression post-discharge and may not receive appropriate follow up. As such, there is critical need to improve bedside risk-screening tools. We aimed to identify demographic, social, and trauma-related predictors of mental health symptoms among patients with negative bedside screens.
Patients were injury survivors served by a Level I trauma center who were identified as "low risk for development of PTSD/depression" by the Injured Trauma Survivor Screen. Patient injury type and demographics were collected from the medical record.
Violent injuries (e.g., gunshot wound) and lower levels of available social support predicted elevated PTSD symptoms 30-days post-injury. Lower social support also was associated with increased risk for depressive symptoms 30 days post-injury.
Findings suggest that risk-screening tools may be improved by including items that capture injury mechanism and social support. Alternatively, trauma centers should consider mental health referral for patients who have experienced violent trauma or have low levels of social support, even when bedside screening tools identify them as having low mental health risk.
美国外科医师学会现在要求创伤中心对住院患者进行心理健康筛查及随访。全国性评估表明,这些患者中有20%-40%会在受伤后一年内患上创伤后应激障碍(PTSD)和/或抑郁症。研究已经确定了一些能预测出院后PTSD和抑郁症的简短床边筛查方法,如受伤创伤幸存者筛查和创伤期应激量表。然而,假阴性情况很常见;几乎四分之一床边风险筛查为阴性的患者出院后可能会患上PTSD或抑郁症,且可能无法得到适当的随访。因此,迫切需要改进床边风险筛查工具。我们旨在确定床边筛查为阴性的患者中,心理健康症状的人口统计学、社会及创伤相关预测因素。
患者为一级创伤中心救治的受伤幸存者,经受伤创伤幸存者筛查被确定为“PTSD/抑郁症发病低风险”。从病历中收集患者的损伤类型和人口统计学信息。
暴力损伤(如枪伤)和较低水平的社会支持预示着受伤后30天PTSD症状会加重。较低的社会支持也与受伤后30天出现抑郁症状的风险增加有关。
研究结果表明,通过纳入反映损伤机制和社会支持的项目,风险筛查工具可能会得到改进。或者,创伤中心应考虑为经历过暴力创伤或社会支持水平较低的患者提供心理健康转诊,即使床边筛查工具将他们识别为心理健康低风险患者。