Psychological Distress Clinical Trial
Official title:
Psychological Distress in Relatives of Severely Injured Patients
Patients who have sustained and survived a polytrauma do heavily depend on the support and
functioning of their family. This is only possible if the family members are physically and
mentally able to cope with the situation.
It is the investigators' hypothesis that the true percentage of polytrauma patients'
relatives suffering under relevant psychological distress is higher than commonly assumed.
The investigators conduct a prospective cohort study where we follow up on a cohort of
patients and their relatives over 1 year after trauma - one group with severely injured
patients (case) and one group with minor musculo-skeletal injuries (control).
In order to assess the influence of the patients' disability and their own psychological
distress on the psychological distress of the relatives, the investigators also collect
corresponding data from the patients themselves.
In order to assess the influence of the trauma itself, the investigators compare a group of
multiple injured patients and their relatives with a group of patients with isolated
musculoskeletal injuries and their relatives. In addition, the investigators record the ISS
of each patient. In order to investigate the changes in relatives' distress over time and to
find out more about potential risk factors or con-founders it is necessary to conduct a
prospective study.
Background The incidence of polytrauma has been estimated to range between 25 and 52 per
100'000 in Europe. Severely injured patients are known to suffer increased psychological
distress and early identification of these patients can help to provide resources and support
for coping strategies. The long-term physical and mental health of such polytrauma survivors
can be improved by the presence of a supporting network including patients support groups,
social support networking, and - most important - family and friends.
While it has been shown that caring for a family member with chronic disease like cancer or
disability after isolated traumatic brain injury or a stroke is associated with significant
distress for relatives, little is known on how families function and cope after one of them
has had an accident with multiple severe injuries.
Rationale for the research project Patients who have sustained and survived a polytrauma do
heavily depend on the support and functioning of their family. This is only possible if the
family members are physically and mentally able to cope with the situation.
It is the study's hypothesis that the true percentage of polytrauma patients' relatives
suffering under relevant psychological distress is higher than commonly assumed. It is the
investigators' strong opinion that it would be important to identify these individuals early
(e.g. by a screening test as the one developed in this study) in order to help the helpers.
Objectives
Primary objective: to investigate the psychological impact on relatives of having a severely
injured patient as family member in dependence of:
- the patient's disability and psychological stress
- the severity of the trauma (multiple injuries vs isolated musculoskeletal injury)
Secondary objective: to develop a simple screening test (Numeric Scale of Distress) and
to validate it against existing more complex scoring systems.
Primary and secondary endpoint/outcome(s) Primary outcome: Hospital Anxiety and Depression
Scale (HADS) at 1, 3, 6 and 12 months Secondary outcomes: Brief Family Distress Scale (BFDS)
and Numeric Scale of Family Distress (NSFD) at 1, 3, 6 and 12 months c) Screening test:
Correlation between NSFD and HADS, and NSFD and BFDS
Other study variables
- Patient's age and gender
- Patient's pattern of injury (Abbreviated Injury Scale [AIS] & Injury Severity Score
[ISS])
- Patient's injury result of interperson-violence [Yes/No]
- Patient's degree of disability (Stanford HAQ 8-Item Disability Scale; HAQDS)
- Patient's situation of living (home no help, home with support, nursing home)
- Relative's age and gender
- Relative's degree of kinship (spouse/partner, son/daughter, parent, sibling, cousin)
Design Prospective study In order to confirm the investigators's primary hypothesis that the
true percentage of polytrauma patients' relatives suffering under relevant psychological
distress is higher than commonly assumed we follow up on a cohort of patients and their
relatives over 1 year after trauma - one group with severely injured patients (case) and one
group with minor musculo-skeletal injuries (control).
In order to assess the influence of the patients' disability and their own psychological
distress on the psychological distress of the relatives, the investigators also collect
corresponding data from the patients themselves.
In order to assess the influence of the trauma itself, the investigators compare a group of
multiple injured patients and their relatives with a group of patients with isolated
musculoskeletal injuries and their relatives. In addition, the investigators record the ISS
of each patient In order to investigate the changes in relatives' distress over time and to
find out more about potential risk factors or confounders it is necessary to conduct a
prospective study.
Procedures
1. a list of severely injured patients and patients with isolated non-life threatening
musculo-skeletal injuries will be generated from the intern Polytrauma Database and the
clinical information system. Only those individuals will have access to this data, that
had already been involved into the treatment of these patients or otherwise had by law
the right to access the charts (in order not to violate the command of professional
confidentiality).
2. within 6 weeks of the initial trauma, patients and their relatives who are eligible
according to the inclusion and exclusion criteria will be contacted by phone and will be
asked if they would be willing to participate (duration for each participant: 5 min, in
most cases only the patient or one member of the family will be contacted as a first
representative). During this phone call, also the basic ability to understand German
language will be assessed.
3. if agreed, the patient and their relatives will be send the study information, the
informed consent form and a short questionnaire containing the HADS (14 items), the BFDS
(1 item), and the NSFD (1 numeric scale)as well as questions regarding the other
variables listed above under 4.3. The questionnaires will be number-coded. The patient
will be asked to complete the HAQDS (8 items), in addition. Completion of the whole
questionnaire will take about 10 min per participant. The participants will be asked to
send back the signed informed consent and the completed questionnaire.
4. if there is no response to step 2 or 3, the participants will be contacted by phone or
mail once more
5. the returned questionnaires will be evaluated for presence of informed consent and then
transferred into a number-coded REDCap data file. Only the research team will have
access to the main data file and only the project leader will have access to the code
key. Both files will be stored on a research server of the Klinik für Traumatologie,
UniversitätsSpital Zürich.
Criteria for withdrawal / discontinuation of participants
A participant will be discontinued from the project in case of:
- withdrawal of informed consent
- non-compliance In such case, all health-related data that has already been acquired will
be anonymized upon termination of data analysis or - if anonymization is not possible -
will be kept for further analysis as the patient was informed and gave consent to at the
beginning of the project.
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