The Journal of neuroscience nursing : journal of the American Association of Neuroscience Nurses
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Comparative Study
Emotional distress in critically-injured patients three months after a potentially life-threatening accident.
A case-control study was carried out to determine why some critically-injured patients remained emotionally distressed while other critically-injured patients were found to be minimally distressed three months after a potentially life-threatening accidental injury. Cognitive processing and meaning theories suggest that psychological adjustment following a traumatizing event depends on the successful integration of the event into current or modified cognitive schema and the restoration of a sense of meaning in life. These cognitive processes may be facilitated by coping strategies that share concerns, mobilize support and reframe disturbing elements. ⋯ In contrast, minimally distressed patients evidenced a significantly greater ability to acknowledge the negative effects on the self and a higher level of psychological well-being. The potential differences between the two groups in the magnitude of the relationships of meaning, cognitive processing and coping strategies on psychological well-being were assessed by hierarchical regression equations. Psychological well-being of minimally distressed patients was characterized by a significantly higher perception of their capabilities and strengths and by an ability to acknowledge a change in their relations with family and friends.