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Journal Article

Citation

Maiga AW, Cook M, Nordness MF, Gao Y, Rakhit S, Rivera EL, Harrell FE, Sharp KW, Patel MB. J. Am. Coll. Surg. 2024; ePub(ePub): ePub.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2024, American College of Surgeons, Publisher Elsevier Publishing)

DOI

10.1097/XCS.0000000000000960

PMID

38214447

Abstract

BACKGROUND: The Glasgow Outcome Scale Extended (GOSE) is a measure of recovery after traumatic brain injury (TBI). Public surveys rate some GOSE states worse than death. Direct family experience caring for TBI patients may impact views of post-TBI disability. STUDY DESIGN: We conducted a national cross-sectional computer-adaptive survey of surrogates of TBI dependents incurring injury >1y prior. Using a standard gamble approach in randomized order, surrogates evaluated preferences for post-TBI GOSE states from GOSE2 (bedridden, unaware) to GOSE8 (good recovery). We calculated median [IQR] health utilities for each post-TBI state, ranging from -1 to 1, with 0 as reference (death=GOSE1), and assessed sociodemographic associations using proportional odds logistic regression modeling.

RESULTS: Of 515 eligible surrogates, 298 (58%) completed scenarios. Surrogates were median aged 46 [IQR 35,60], 54% married, with Santa Clara strength of faith 14 [10,18]. TBI dependents had a median GOSE5 [3,7]. Median [IQR] health utility ratings for GOSE2, GOSE3, and GOSE4 were -0.06 [-0.50,-0.01], -0.01 [-0.30,0.45], and 0.30 [-0.01,0.80], rated worse than death by 91%, 65%, and 40%, respectively. Surrogates rated GOSE4 (daily partial help) worse than the general population. Married surrogates rated GOSE4 higher (p<0.01). Higher strength of faith was associated with higher utility scores across GOSE states (p=0.034).

CONCLUSIONS: In this index study of surrogate perceptions about disability after TBI, poor neurologic outcomes - vegetative, needing all-day or partial daily assistance - were perceived as worse than death by at least one in three surrogates. Surrogate perceptions differed from the unexposed public. Long-term perceptions about post-TBI disability may inform earlier, tailored shared decision-making after neurotrauma.


Language: en

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