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Predictive factors of chronic post-traumatic stress disorder 6 months after a road traffic accident
Authors:Chossegros Laetitia  Hours Martine  Charnay Pierrette  Bernard Marlène  Fort Emmanuel  Boisson Dominique  Sancho Pierre-Olivier  Yao Sai Nan  Laumon Bernard
Affiliation:aTransport Work and Environmental Epidemiology Research and Surveillance Unit - UMRESTTE (UMR T9405) Université de Lyon, INRETS, InVS 69500 Bron, France;bService de Médecine Physique et de Réadaptation, Hôpital Henry Gabrielle, Hospices Civils de Lyon, F-69230 St Genis Laval, France;cService de Psychiatrie, Centre Hospitalier de Vienne, BP 127, 38209 Vienne Cedex, France
Abstract:

Background

This study sets out to identify risk factors for post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) after a road traffic accident with a view to improving prevention.

Methods

The study used a prospective cohort of road traffic accident casualties. All subjects over 15 years of age were recruited in the course of an interview conducted while they were receiving care in a hospital of the Rhône area administrative département. Six months after their accident, they answered a self-administered postal questionnaire that included the Post-traumatic Check-List Scale (PCLS) in order to evaluate PTSD. Multivariate logistic regression analysis was conducted to compare those subjects with a PCLS score of 44 or over with those with a lower score, in order to identify factors that might be associated with PTSD.

Results

592 subjects (out of 1168) returned the 6-month questionnaire and 541 completed the PCLS test. One hundred subjects had a PCLS score ≥44, suggesting PTSD, and 441 subjects did not. The factors associated with PTSD were initial injury severity, post-traumatic amnesia, the feeling of not being responsible for their accident and persistent pain 6 months after it. A lower odds-ratio was associated with users of two-wheel than four-wheel motor vehicles (OR = 0.4; 0.2–0.9).

Conclusion

Besides predictive factors for PTSD (injury severity, post-traumatic amnesia and the feeling of not being responsible for their accident), our study suggested a reduced risk of PTSD among two-wheel motor vehicle users.
Keywords:Post-traumatic stress disorder   Road traffic accident   Six-month follow-up   Two-wheel motor vehicle   Cohort study
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