OBJECTIVE: The purpose of this study was to examine the prevalence,
natural history, and psychosocial impact of posttraumatic symptoms in adult
burn survivors. METHOD: Forty-three adult inpatients at a regional burn
center were assessed at discharge with standardized instruments to
determine the presence of psychiatric disorder, assess personality, and
quantify depression. Thirty-one patients were evaluated 4 months after
discharge. RESULTS: Posttraumatic stress disorder was diagnosed in 7% of
patients at discharge and in over 22% of patients at follow-up. Symptoms of
avoidance and emotional numbing (DSM-III-R criterion C symptoms) tended to
emerge after discharge from the hospital. While posttraumatic symptoms were
associated with symptoms of depression, they were not strongly associated
with psychosocial adjustment to illness; psychosocial adjustment was more
strongly related to aspects of personality, the injury itself, and its
treatment. CONCLUSIONS: Since adult burn survivors often develop new
symptoms of posttraumatic distress after leaving the hospital, longitudinal
surveillance is required to detect new cases and provide appropriate
treatment. Survivors at risk for poor psychosocial adjustment after
discharge may be identifiable during hospitalization, and preventive
treatment strategies should be developed and tested for this
population.Abstract Teaser