Abstract
This study examined whether retrospective reports of posttraumatic growth (PTG) and depreciation (PTD) of individuals recently diagnosed with a spinal cord injury (SCI) coincide with prospectively measured changes in the conceptually close domains of general self-efficacy (SE) and purpose in life (PIL). The study also tested whether PTG/D and changes in SE and PIL independently predict psychological adjustment to the injury (depressive symptoms, anxiety, life satisfaction). Adopting a longitudinal design, a sample of 206 newly injured patients admitted to one of the four Swiss SCI rehabilitation centers was analyzed. SE and PIL were assessed one month after injury diagnosis and at rehabilitation discharge, PTG/D and the adjustment indicators only at discharge. Structural equation modeling was used to calculate latent change scores for SE and PIL, to correlate these scores to PTG/D scores, and to regress the adjustment indicators on both of them. PTG/D scores were weakly (rmax = .20, p = .033) correlated to changes in SE and PIL. In the multivariate analyses, positive changes in SE and PIL and PTG scores were all associated with better adjustment (e.g., fewer depressive symptoms). In contrast, PTD scores were related to lower adjustment. These results suggest that PTG/D in the initial time after a potentially traumatic medical event seem to be illusory to some degree, as indicated by their weak association with "actual" (i.e., longitudinally measured) changes. Nevertheless, both, PTG/D and actual changes, need to be considered by researchers and clinicians, as they seem to be independently related to psychological adjustment. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2018 APA, all rights reserved).
Highlights
The present study focused only on data collected at one month post injury (T1; baseline measurement of SE and purpose in life (PIL)) and at rehabilitation discharge (T2; follow up measurement of SE and PIL, measurement of perceived posttraumatic growth (PTG), posttraumatic depreciation (PTD), and the adjustment indicators)
The present study examined the association of perceived PTG and PTD at discharge from clinical rehabilitation with actual changes in the conceptually close domains of SE and PIL across rehabilitation in individuals with spinal cord injury (SCI)
The present study contributes to a better understanding of perceived PTG and PTD and their role in the psychological adjustment process to health-related potentially traumatic events such as SCI
Summary
Participants and DesignThe present study used data from Pathway 3 of the Swiss Spinal Cord Injury Cohort Study (SwiSCI PW3; see Post et al, 2011). SwiSCI PW3 is an extensive inception cohort study following individuals recently diagnosed with an SCI across their clinical rehabilitation and beyond. Included are all Swiss residents newly diagnosed with an SCI, aged 16 years or older, and admitted for clinical rehabilitation to one of the four Swiss rehabilitation centers (Spinal Cord Injury Center of the Balgrist University Hospital, Zürich; Centre for Spinal Cord Injury and Severe Head Injury, REHAB Basel; Clinique Romande de Réadaptation, Sion; and the Swiss Paraplegic Centre, Nottwil). The SwiSCI study was approved by the principal ethics committee on research involving humans of Northwest and Central Switzerland (covering the collaboration centers in Nottwil and Basel), the Ethics Committee Vaud (covering the center in Sion), and the Ethics Committee Zürich (covering the center in Zürich).
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