TitleThe 2000 Clinical Research Award. Describing and predicting distress and satisfaction with life for burn survivors.
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2000
AuthorsPatterson DR, Ptacek JT, Cromes F, Fauerbach JA, Engrav L
JournalJ Burn Care Rehabil
Volume21
Issue6
Pagination490-8
Date Published2000 Nov-Dec
ISSN0273-8481
KeywordsAdult, Awards and Prizes, Burns, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Models, Psychological, Patient Satisfaction, Quality of Life, Social Support, Stress, Psychological
Abstract

We investigated ratings of emotional distress and satisfaction with life at discharge from the hospital and at a 6-month follow-up in a multisite sample of 295 adults hospitalized for the care of a major burn injury. Several psychosocial variables (history of alcohol abuse, marital status, and previous mental health) and some medical variables (days of intensive care, pulmonary complications, and hand burns) accounted for significant variance in the prediction of outcomes. Brief Symptom Inventory (distress) scores were higher and Satisfaction With Life Scale scores were significantly lower than those of a normative population at both measurement points. The results show the utility of biosocial models in which psychological and physical variables interact to influence adjustment and quality of life.

Alternate JournalJ Burn Care Rehabil
PubMed ID11194801