Publication | Closed Access
A Longitudinal Study of Self-Awareness: Functional Deficits Underestimated by Persons with Brain Injury
98
Citations
18
References
1999
Year
Traumatic Brain InjuryNeuropsychologyNeurological RehabilitationNeurological InjuryCognitive RehabilitationPsychologyBrain Injury RehabilitationSocial SciencesBrain InjuryNeurorehabilitationCognitive NeuroscienceMemory ActivitiesCognitive ScienceDaily LivingNeuropsychological FunctioningPsychiatrySelf-awarenessRehabilitationFunctional RecoveryConcussionMedicineFunctional DeficitsPost-traumatic Stress Disorder
A longitudinal study of 55 adults with severe traumatic brain injury (TBI) investigated the areas of function for which they lacked self-awareness of their level of competency. Data were collected at 3 and 12 months post-injury using the Patient Competency Rating Scale. Self-awareness was measured by comparing patient self-ratings with the ratings of an informant. The results were consistent with previous studies, indicating that self-awareness was most impaired for activities with a large cognitive and socioemotional component, and least impaired for basic activities of daily living, memory activities, and overt emotional responses. For most areas of function that were overestimated at 3 months post-injury, self-awareness subsequently improved during the first year after injury.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1