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Journal Article

Citation

Julie W. Wounds UK 2013; 9(3): 14-17.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2013)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

Psychological distress among people who have sustained burns is common. The time taken for burn wounds to heal cannot be fully explained by physical factors, such as wound size and depth. A growing body of evidence in the literature indicates that psychological factors impact the wound healing process. Clinicians should give consideration to the importance of psychological influences on the wound healing process within burns care, and also to the potential for psychological interventions to lessen patients' distress and improve wound healing outcomes.


Language: en

Keywords

adult; human; suicide; burn; female; case report; depression; Burn injury; schizophrenia; Psychological distress; hospitalization; mood disorder; stress management; hopelessness; alcohol abuse; alcohol consumption; article; anorexia; psychological aspect; distress syndrome; smoking; sleep disorder; psychophysiology; nonhuman; mental stress; functional disease; scar formation; wound healing; hypophysis adrenal system; muscle relaxation; Psychoneuroimmunology; body surface; wound closure; hyperpnea; environmental enrichment; Wound healing

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