Abstract

BackgroundTraumatic exposure is a frequent issue in patients visiting emergency departments (EDs). Some patients will subsequently develop post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) while other will not. The problem is under-diagnosed in EDs and no standardized management is provided to prevent PTSD. Most studies focused on a particular group of trauma whereas we need a global approach to further develop interventions for detecting and treating patients at high risk. We aim to assess the prevalence of traumatic exposure and situation at high risk of further PTSD and identify pre and peri-traumatic biopsychosocial factors predisposing individuals to PTSD in the general context of EDs.MethodsThis comprehensive multicenter study will have two steps. The first step will be a cross-sectional study on moderate and high risk of PTSD prevalence among EDs visitors with a recent history of trauma. All patients aged 18–70 years, presenting with a recent history of trauma (< 1 month) in one of the six EDs in the Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes region (≈1/10° of the French population) will be included over a 1-month period and approximately 1500 subjects are expected in this cross-sectional step. The risk of PTSD will be assessed using the Impact of Event Scale Revised (IES-R). Self-administered questionnaires will be used to measure acute stress (IES–R), and a number of potential bio-psycho-social risk factors. Demographic and physical health-related data will be collected from medical file. Second step will be a prospective cohort study within a sub-sample of 400 patients enrolled in step 1, randomly selected with stratification on sex, age, ED, and IES–R score. At 3 months, PTSD will be defined by a ≥ 33 score at PTSD Check List for DSM–5 (PCL–5) through a telephone interview. We will evaluate definite PTSD biopsychosocial predictive factors using a multivariate logistic regression model and describe evolution of PTSD at 3 months.DiscussionThis is the first study to assess PTSD predictors prospectively with a biopsychosocial approach within a cohort representative of EDs visitors. The results will inform the development of dedicated interventions to decrease the risk of subsequent PTSD.Trial registrationClinicalTrials.gov: NCT03615014; ISSUE protocol 2nd version was approved on 07/08/2018.

Highlights

  • Traumatic exposure is a frequent issue in patients visiting emergency departments (EDs)

  • Primary objectives The primary objective of the cross-sectional study is to estimate the prevalence of patients with high or moderate risk of developing post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) in all consecutive cases admitted to the EDs after recent trauma (< 1 month)

  • Impact of Event Scale Revised (IES-R) has good psychometric characteristics [56,57,58,59,60,61,62], and is recommended in France for PTSD surveillance [63]

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Summary

Introduction

Traumatic exposure is a frequent issue in patients visiting emergency departments (EDs). Some patients will subsequently develop post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) while other will not. The likelihood of developing somatic pathologies such as cardio-vascular disorders is very high [13, 14]. Such patients, in addition to the disorder itself, suffer from its physical, occupational, and social sequelae. Such consequences result in a significant economic impact [5]

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