Waldron-Perrine, B; Tree, H A; Spencer, R J; Suhr, J; Bieliauskas, L
Informational literature influences symptom expression following mild head injury: An analog study Journal Article
In: Brain Injury, vol. 29, no. 9, pp. 1051–1055, 2015.
Abstract | BibTeX | Tags: *Brain Injuries/di [Diagnosis], *Brain Injuries/px [Psychology], *Information Dissemination, *Post-Concussion Syndrome/di [Diagnosis], *Post-Concussion Syndrome/px [Psychology], adult, Female, Health Communication, Humans, Language, Male, middle aged, Neuropsychological Tests, Post-Traumatic/di [Diagnosis], Stress Disorders, Veterans/px [Psychology], Young Adult
@article{Waldron-Perrine2015,
title = {Informational literature influences symptom expression following mild head injury: An analog study},
author = {Waldron-Perrine, B and Tree, H A and Spencer, R J and Suhr, J and Bieliauskas, L},
year = {2015},
date = {2015-01-01},
journal = {Brain Injury},
volume = {29},
number = {9},
pages = {1051--1055},
abstract = {PRIMARY OBJECTIVE: Many Veterans involved in recent OEF/OIF conflicts return with reports of having experienced an mTBI. The Veteran's Affairs (VA) and Department of Defense (DoD) have gone to great lengths to provide information to Veterans regarding possible effects of TBI. Although well intended, this information may possibly have an iatrogenic effect. Conversely, setting positive expectations for recovery from mTBI has been shown to result in decreased symptomatology. RESEARCH DESIGN: One-way ANOVA and Tukey post-hoc analyses were used to determine whether there were significant differences on reported severity and number of PCS symptoms (NSI) among the three experimental groups (recovery focused information; expectation for persistent symptoms; and no information given). METHODS AND PROCEDURES: Undergraduate students, who were told to imagine they had experienced a military-related TBI, reported varying levels of expected symptoms when given either positive or negative information about symptom expectation. MAIN OUTCOMES AND RESULTS: The results indicate that presenting recovery-oriented literature resulted in the lowest report of expected symptoms, whereas presenting no information resulted in the highest report of expected symptoms. CONCLUSIONS: Providing Veterans with information regarding a likely positive trajectory of recovery may result in less symptom persistence during rehabilitation.},
keywords = {*Brain Injuries/di [Diagnosis], *Brain Injuries/px [Psychology], *Information Dissemination, *Post-Concussion Syndrome/di [Diagnosis], *Post-Concussion Syndrome/px [Psychology], adult, Female, Health Communication, Humans, Language, Male, middle aged, Neuropsychological Tests, Post-Traumatic/di [Diagnosis], Stress Disorders, Veterans/px [Psychology], Young Adult},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {article}
}
Waldron-Perrine, B; Tree, H A; Spencer, R J; Suhr, J; Bieliauskas, L
Informational literature influences symptom expression following mild head injury: An analog study Journal Article
In: Brain Injury, vol. 29, no. 9, pp. 1051–1055, 2015.
@article{Waldron-Perrine2015,
title = {Informational literature influences symptom expression following mild head injury: An analog study},
author = {Waldron-Perrine, B and Tree, H A and Spencer, R J and Suhr, J and Bieliauskas, L},
year = {2015},
date = {2015-01-01},
journal = {Brain Injury},
volume = {29},
number = {9},
pages = {1051--1055},
abstract = {PRIMARY OBJECTIVE: Many Veterans involved in recent OEF/OIF conflicts return with reports of having experienced an mTBI. The Veteran's Affairs (VA) and Department of Defense (DoD) have gone to great lengths to provide information to Veterans regarding possible effects of TBI. Although well intended, this information may possibly have an iatrogenic effect. Conversely, setting positive expectations for recovery from mTBI has been shown to result in decreased symptomatology. RESEARCH DESIGN: One-way ANOVA and Tukey post-hoc analyses were used to determine whether there were significant differences on reported severity and number of PCS symptoms (NSI) among the three experimental groups (recovery focused information; expectation for persistent symptoms; and no information given). METHODS AND PROCEDURES: Undergraduate students, who were told to imagine they had experienced a military-related TBI, reported varying levels of expected symptoms when given either positive or negative information about symptom expectation. MAIN OUTCOMES AND RESULTS: The results indicate that presenting recovery-oriented literature resulted in the lowest report of expected symptoms, whereas presenting no information resulted in the highest report of expected symptoms. CONCLUSIONS: Providing Veterans with information regarding a likely positive trajectory of recovery may result in less symptom persistence during rehabilitation.},
keywords = {},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {article}
}
Waldron-Perrine, B; Tree, H A; Spencer, R J; Suhr, J; Bieliauskas, L
Informational literature influences symptom expression following mild head injury: An analog study Journal Article
In: Brain Injury, vol. 29, no. 9, pp. 1051–1055, 2015.
Abstract | BibTeX | Tags: *Brain Injuries/di [Diagnosis], *Brain Injuries/px [Psychology], *Information Dissemination, *Post-Concussion Syndrome/di [Diagnosis], *Post-Concussion Syndrome/px [Psychology], adult, Female, Health Communication, Humans, Language, Male, middle aged, Neuropsychological Tests, Post-Traumatic/di [Diagnosis], Stress Disorders, Veterans/px [Psychology], Young Adult
@article{Waldron-Perrine2015,
title = {Informational literature influences symptom expression following mild head injury: An analog study},
author = {Waldron-Perrine, B and Tree, H A and Spencer, R J and Suhr, J and Bieliauskas, L},
year = {2015},
date = {2015-01-01},
journal = {Brain Injury},
volume = {29},
number = {9},
pages = {1051--1055},
abstract = {PRIMARY OBJECTIVE: Many Veterans involved in recent OEF/OIF conflicts return with reports of having experienced an mTBI. The Veteran's Affairs (VA) and Department of Defense (DoD) have gone to great lengths to provide information to Veterans regarding possible effects of TBI. Although well intended, this information may possibly have an iatrogenic effect. Conversely, setting positive expectations for recovery from mTBI has been shown to result in decreased symptomatology. RESEARCH DESIGN: One-way ANOVA and Tukey post-hoc analyses were used to determine whether there were significant differences on reported severity and number of PCS symptoms (NSI) among the three experimental groups (recovery focused information; expectation for persistent symptoms; and no information given). METHODS AND PROCEDURES: Undergraduate students, who were told to imagine they had experienced a military-related TBI, reported varying levels of expected symptoms when given either positive or negative information about symptom expectation. MAIN OUTCOMES AND RESULTS: The results indicate that presenting recovery-oriented literature resulted in the lowest report of expected symptoms, whereas presenting no information resulted in the highest report of expected symptoms. CONCLUSIONS: Providing Veterans with information regarding a likely positive trajectory of recovery may result in less symptom persistence during rehabilitation.},
keywords = {*Brain Injuries/di [Diagnosis], *Brain Injuries/px [Psychology], *Information Dissemination, *Post-Concussion Syndrome/di [Diagnosis], *Post-Concussion Syndrome/px [Psychology], adult, Female, Health Communication, Humans, Language, Male, middle aged, Neuropsychological Tests, Post-Traumatic/di [Diagnosis], Stress Disorders, Veterans/px [Psychology], Young Adult},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {article}
}