Author:
Miley Aimee E.,Patronick Jamie,Zhang Nanhua,Bode Rachel L.,Fabio Anthony,Treble-Barna Amery,Chima Ranjit S.,Adlam Anna-Lynne R.,Bell Michael J.,Wisniewski Stephen R.,Beers Sue R.,Wade Shari L.,Kurowski Brad G.
Abstract
Objective:
To examine the association of home and neighborhood environment with neurobehavioral outcomes after severe pediatric traumatic brain injury (TBI).
Setting:
Domestic and international children’s medical centers.
Participants:
Participants enrolled in the study were 18 years or younger at the time of their severe TBI (Glasgow Coma Scale [GCS] ≤ 8), admitted to the intensive care unit, and underwent placement of an intracranial pressure (ICP) monitor. Exclusionary criteria included less severe injury (GCS > 8), pregnancy, and/or ICP monitor placement occurred at a non-participating hospital.
Design:
A multicenter, observational cohort study.
Main Measures:
Outcomes assessed at 12 months post-injury included measures of global functioning, intellectual ability, caregiver-report measures of family functioning, executive functioning behaviors, behavior problems, and health-related quality of life. We examined mortality risk (assessed acutely after injury), family functioning (assessed at 12 months post-injury) and parenting practices, social environment, and neighborhood stressors (all assessed > 12 months post-injury), as correlates and moderators of the 12-month post-injury outcomes.
Results:
Home and neighborhood factors were associated with neurobehavioral outcomes (ie, intellectual ability, executive functioning, behavioral adjustment, and health-related quality of life) but not with global functioning outcomes. A negative association between a more vulnerable home and neighborhood environment and neurobehavioral outcomes was more consistent in older children compared with younger children, based on age of injury. The influence of mortality risk on neurobehavioral outcomes was variable.
Conclusion:
Parenting practices and quality of social and neighborhood environment are associated with neurobehavioral outcomes 12 months after severe pediatric TBI. More research is needed to better understand the relationship between home/neighborhood stressors and TBI recovery to develop and implement strategies for patients and families to optimize outcomes. Future intervention development should focus on addressing parenting practices and social environment in a developmentally sensitive way for children who have sustained a severe TBI.
Publisher
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)