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Browsing by Author "Finn, Jacob A."
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Item Anxiety Trajectories the First 10 Years After a Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI): A TBI Model Systems Study(Elsevier, 2022-11) Neumann, Dawn; Juengst, Shannon B.; Bombardier, Charles H.; Finn, Jacob A.; Miles, Shannon R.; Zhang, Yue; Kennedy, Richard; Rabinowitz, Amanda R.; Thomas, Amber; Dreer, Laura E.; Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, School of MedicineObjective Determine anxiety trajectories and predictors up to 10 years posttraumatic brain injury (TBI). Design Prospective longitudinal, observational study. Setting Inpatient rehabilitation centers. Participants 2836 participants with moderate to severe TBI enrolled in the TBI Model Systems National Database who had ≥2 anxiety data collection points (N=2836). Main Outcome Measure Generalized Anxiety Disorder-7 (GAD-7) at 1, 2, 5, and 10-year follow-ups. Results Linear mixed models showed higher GAD-7 scores were associated with Black race (P<.001), public insurance (P<.001), pre-injury mental health treatment (P<.001), 2 additional TBIs with loss of consciousness (P=.003), violent injury (P=.047), and more years post-TBI (P=.023). An interaction between follow-up year and age was also related to GAD-7 scores (P=.006). A latent class mixed model identified 3 anxiety trajectories: low-stable (n=2195), high-increasing (n=289), and high-decreasing (n=352). The high-increasing and high-decreasing groups had mild or higher GAD-7 scores up to 10 years. Compared to the low-stable group, the high-decreasing group was more likely to be Black (OR=2.25), have public insurance (OR=2.13), have had pre-injury mental health treatment (OR=1.77), and have had 2 prior TBIs (OR=3.16). Conclusions A substantial minority of participants had anxiety symptoms that either increased (10%) or decreased (13%) over 10 years but never decreased below mild anxiety. Risk factors of anxiety included indicators of socioeconomic disadvantage (public insurance) and racial inequities (Black race) as well as having had pre-injury mental health treatment and 2 prior TBIs. Awareness of these risk factors may lead to identifying and proactively referring susceptible individuals to mental health services.Item Perceived care partner burden at 1-year post-injury and associations with emotional awareness, functioning, and empathy after TBI: A TBI model systems study(IOS Press, 2023) Klyce, Daniel W.; Merced, Kritzianel; Erickson, Alexander; Neumann, Dawn M.; Hammond, Flora M.; Sander, Angelle M.; Bogner, Jennifer A.; Bushnik, Tamara; Chung, Joyce S.; Finn, Jacob A.; Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, School of MedicineBackground: People with traumatic brain injury (TBI) can lack awareness of their own emotions and often have problems with emotion dysregulation, affective disorders, and empathy deficits. These impairments are known to impact psychosocial behaviors and may contribute to the burden experienced by care partners of individuals with TBI. Objective: To examine the associations of emotional awareness, emotional functioning, and empathy among participants with TBI with care partner burden. Method: This multisite, cross-sectional, observational study used data from 90 dyads (participants with TBI and their care partner) 1-year post-injury. Participants with TBI completed the Difficulty with Emotional Regulation Scale (DERS; Awareness, Clarity, Goals, Impulse, Nonacceptance, and Strategies subscales); PTSD Checklist-Civilian Version; NIH Toolbox Anger-Affect, Hostility and Aggression Subdomains; PHQ-9; GAD-7; and the Interpersonal Reactivity Index (empathic concern and perspective taking subscales). Care partners completed the Zarit Burden Inventory (ZBI) and provided demographic information. Results: Care partners were predominately female (77%), and most were either a spouse/partner (55.2%) or parent (34.4%). In an unadjusted model that included assessments of emotional awareness, emotional functioning, and empathy of the participant with TBI, the DERS-Awareness and NIH-Hostility subscales accounted for a significant amount of variance associated with care partner burden. These findings persisted after adjusting for care partner age, relationship, education, and the functional status of the participant with TBI (β= 0.493 and β= 0.328, respectively). Conclusion: These findings suggest that high levels of hostility and low emotional self-awareness can significantly affect the burden felt by TBI care partners.