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Journal Article

Citation

Salamati P, Rostami R, Saadat S, Taheri T, Tajabadi M, Ranjbari G, Naji Z, Jafarpour S, Rahimi-Movaghar V. Med. J. Islam. Repub. Iran 2015; 29: e198.

Affiliation

Professor, Sina Trauma and Surgery Research Center, Tehran University of Medical Sciences, Tehran, Iran. V_rahimi@yahoo.com.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2015, Tehran University of Medical Sciences)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

26157716

PMCID

PMC4476210

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Patients with spinal cord injury (SCI) have a lower health related quality of life (HRQOL) compared to both healthy controls and the normal population. The aim of this study was to compare HRQOL between two groups of veteran and non-veteran SCI patients.

METHODS: All male paraplegic non-veterans who had sustained complete SCI before 1988 and were residents of Tehran province (Iran), and a similar group of SCI veterans who consecutively participated in a health screening program were enrolled in this study. Patients fewer than 35 and older than 65 years of age were not included in this study. The participants were interviewed based on the Persian version of SF-36 questionnaire by two psychologists. Eight sub-scales and two physical and mental component summaries of the instrument were assessed. We used chi-square, odds ratio, Mann-Whitney U, independent t-test and linear regression for analysis.

RESULTS: Overall, 25 veterans and 22 non-veterans were enrolled in the study. The mean age, time since injury and the presence of comorbid illnesses were not significantly different between the two groups (P>0.05). A greater number of veterans were married (p= 0.003) and employed (p= 0.047). On average, veterans had more years of formal education than non-veterans (p= 0.001). The mean (SD) bodily pain sub-scale was 72.73(31.253) for non-veterans and 49.7 (28.287) for veterans (p=0.011). Absence of comorbid illnesses was associated with a better physical component summary (p< 0.001). Employment was associated with a better mental component summary (p= 0.022).

CONCLUSION: We did not find any differences in HRQOL between the two groups except for the bodily pain sub-scale. Further studies with larger sample sizes are recommended.


Language: en

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