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Journal Article

Citation

Fein JA, Kassam-Adams N, Vu T, Datner EM. Ann. Emerg. Med. 2001; 38(4): 391-396.

Affiliation

Division of Emergency Medicine, The Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, PA 19104, USA. fein@email.chop.edu

Copyright

(Copyright © 2001, American College of Emergency Physicians, Publisher Elsevier Publishing)

DOI

10.1067/mem.2001.118225

PMID

11574795

Abstract

STUDY OBJECTIVE: We assess the feasibility of evaluating acute stress disorder (ASD) symptoms in the emergency department and provide an initial estimate of the prevalence, severity, and variability of these symptoms in violently injured urban children and young adults. METHODS: The Immediate Stress Response Checklist (ISRC) was administered to violently injured patients between the ages of 8 and 24 years who presented to 2 urban, academic medical center EDs during a 10-week period. The ISRC is designed to assess ASD symptoms in children and youths immediately after a traumatic event. Responses are described using summed symptom severity scores and counts of symptoms. RESULTS: Out of 109 identified youths, 81 participated. Fear, helplessness, or horror during the injury event was reported by 59 (73%) of study participants. Each of the following categories of ASD symptoms was reported by a significant number of youths: peritrauma dissociation, 63 (78%); posttrauma dissociation, 33 (41%); re-experiencing intrusive thoughts or images, 66 (82%); avoidance, 53 (65%); and hyperarousal, 32 (39%). The ISRC demonstrated high internal consistency (Cronbach alpha=.88) in this cohort. CONCLUSION: The ISRC can be used to assess acute stress reactions in violently injured youths in the immediate period after injury. Although these reactions appear to be common, there is substantial variability among distinct symptom categories. These results support the need for further investigation of the relationship between immediate stress responses and longer-term emotional impact of violent injury. Clinicians should consider assessing the emotional responses of children and adolescents who are injured by interpersonal violence, even when these injuries seem minor.


Language: en

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