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Early Psychological Aspects of Severe Hand Injury
88
Citations
3
References
1988
Year
PsychotherapyPsychological Co-morbiditiesSevere Hand InjuryInjury PreventionMental HealthNeurological InjurySocial SciencesPsychologySevere Hand InjuriesVisceral TraumaNeurorehabilitationPsychiatryRehabilitationRehabilitation ProcessHand TherapyHand TraumaFunctional RecoveryMedicineCosmetic ConcernsPsychopathologyPost-traumatic Stress Disorder
We investigated the incidence and nature of psychological symptoms occurring during the first two months after severe hand injuries. 94% of patients had significant symptoms at some point early in rehabilitation, including nightmares (92%), flashbacks (88%), affective lability (84%), preoccupation with phantom limb sensations (13%), concentration/attention problems (12%), cosmetic concerns (10%), fear of death (5%), and denial of amputation (3%). Two months later, flashbacks (63%) remained pronounced. Nightmares (13%), affective lability (48%), concentration/attention problems (5%), fear of death (0%), and denial of amputation (0%) declined markedly, while cosmetic concerns (17%) and preoccupation with phantom limb sensations (17%) increased. Based on these findings, we believe that psychological treatment should often be given as part of the rehabilitation process.
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