TY - JOUR
T1 - Prevalence, comorbidities, and correlates of challenging behavior among community-dwelling adults with severe traumatic brain injury
T2 - a multicenter study
AU - Sabaz, Mark
AU - Simpson, Grahame K.
AU - Walker, Alexandra J.
AU - Rogers, Jeffrey M.
AU - Gillis, Inika
AU - Strettles, Barbara
PY - 2014
Y1 - 2014
N2 - Objective: Investigate the prevalence, comorbidities, and correlates of challenging behaviors among clients of the New South Wales Brain Injury Rehabilitation Program. Setting: All community-based rehabilitation services of the statewide program. Participants: Five hundred seven active clients with severe traumatic brain injury. Design: Prospective multicenter study. Main Measures: Eighty-eight clinicians from the 11 services rated clients on the Overt Behaviour Scale, Disability Rating Scale, Sydney Psychosocial Reintegration Scale-2, Care and Needs Scale, and Health of the Nation Outcome Scale-Acquired Brain Injury. Results: Overall prevalence rate of challenging behaviors was 54%. Inappropriate social behavior (33.3%), aggression (31.9%), and adynamia (23.1%) were the 3 most common individual behaviors, with 35.5% of the sample displaying more than 1 challenging behavior. Significant associations were found between increasing levels of challenging behavior and longer duration of posttraumatic amnesia, increasing functional disability, greater restrictions in participation, increased support needs, and greater degrees of psychiatric disturbance, respectively (P < 0.004). Multivariate binomial logistic regression found that premorbid alcohol abuse, postinjury restrictions in participation, and higher levels of postinjury psychiatric disturbance were independent predictors of challenging behavior. Conclusions: Challenging behaviors are widespread among community-dwelling adults with severe traumatic brain injury. Services need to deliver integrated anger management, social skills, and motivational treatments.
AB - Objective: Investigate the prevalence, comorbidities, and correlates of challenging behaviors among clients of the New South Wales Brain Injury Rehabilitation Program. Setting: All community-based rehabilitation services of the statewide program. Participants: Five hundred seven active clients with severe traumatic brain injury. Design: Prospective multicenter study. Main Measures: Eighty-eight clinicians from the 11 services rated clients on the Overt Behaviour Scale, Disability Rating Scale, Sydney Psychosocial Reintegration Scale-2, Care and Needs Scale, and Health of the Nation Outcome Scale-Acquired Brain Injury. Results: Overall prevalence rate of challenging behaviors was 54%. Inappropriate social behavior (33.3%), aggression (31.9%), and adynamia (23.1%) were the 3 most common individual behaviors, with 35.5% of the sample displaying more than 1 challenging behavior. Significant associations were found between increasing levels of challenging behavior and longer duration of posttraumatic amnesia, increasing functional disability, greater restrictions in participation, increased support needs, and greater degrees of psychiatric disturbance, respectively (P < 0.004). Multivariate binomial logistic regression found that premorbid alcohol abuse, postinjury restrictions in participation, and higher levels of postinjury psychiatric disturbance were independent predictors of challenging behavior. Conclusions: Challenging behaviors are widespread among community-dwelling adults with severe traumatic brain injury. Services need to deliver integrated anger management, social skills, and motivational treatments.
KW - challenging behavior
KW - participation
KW - prevalence
KW - psychiatric disorders
KW - support needs
KW - traumatic brain injury
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84896401710&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1097/HTR.0b013e31828dc590
DO - 10.1097/HTR.0b013e31828dc590
M3 - Article
C2 - 23640541
AN - SCOPUS:84896401710
SN - 0885-9701
VL - 29
SP - E19-E30
JO - Journal of Head Trauma Rehabilitation
JF - Journal of Head Trauma Rehabilitation
IS - 2
ER -