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Journal Article

Citation

Wiseman T, Foster K, Curtis K. Injury 2016; 47(9): 1983-1989.

Affiliation

Sydney Nursing School, University of Sydney, NSW, Australia; Trauma Service, St George Hospital, Kogarah, NSW, Australia; St George Clinical School, Faculty of Medicine, University of NSW, Australia. Electronic address: kate.curtis@sydney.edu.au.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2016, Elsevier Publishing)

DOI

10.1016/j.injury.2016.03.021

PMID

27049864

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: Traumatic physical injury is abrupt, painful, debilitating, costly and life-altering. The experience of emotional wellbeing following traumatic physical injury has not been well investigated, and the role of health services and how services can support the emotional recovery of injured patients has not been well understood. This has impacted on care provision and contributed to a lack of evidence-informed guidance for clinicians to support patients' emotional wellbeing.

AIM: To explore the patient experience of emotional wellbeing following injury and to understand how injured patients manage their emotional wellbeing.

METHOD: The study comprises the follow-up qualitative phase of a mixed-methods explanatory sequential study. Semi-structured interviews were conducted with a purposive sample of 14 participants admitted to hospital following physical injury. Participants were purposely selected where they had reported high levels of depression, anxiety and stress on the DASS-21 at 3 and 6-months after injury. The qualitative data were analysed using thematic analysis.

RESULTS: Three main themes were identified: experiencing the many impacts of injury; facing the emotional journey following injury; and being supported and managing the impacts of injury. Key findings were the extreme negative emotional responses experienced many months after the injury; a strong physical link between the emotional and physical aspects of health; participant reluctance to seek emotional support; a lack of emotional support provision by the health service and a subsequent need for individual and group support in order to develop resilience in the injured person. Finally, male participants who reported extreme emotional responses after injury, including suicidality, were less likely to seek help for their symptoms.

CONCLUSION: Injured patients can experience substantial negative emotional responses following injury. The lack of support provided by health services to injured patients identified highlights the importance of in-hospital screening for emotional wellbeing and follow-up post-discharge, and a support network for patients to reduce the negative impacts of injury on their mental health. There is a need for anticipatory guidance frameworks for clinicians.

Copyright © 2016. Published by Elsevier Ltd.


Language: en

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