Title of article :
The Quality of Life of Trauma Patients with Splint Immobilization
Author/Authors :
Hoseini Kasnavieh ، Mohamad Department of Emergency Medicine - School of medicine - Iran University of Medical Sciences , Mousavi ، Shadi Department of Emergency Medicine - School of medicine - Iran University of Medical Sciences , Veisi ، Mohammad Department of Health Management and Economics - School of Public Health - Tehran University of Medical Sciences , Tahmasebi ، Ali Hospital Management Research Center, Health Management Research Institute - Iran University of Medical Sciences
From page :
1
To page :
4
Abstract :
Background: Different countries have used different methods to reduce trauma-related mortality and its complications. Objectives: Splint is a temporary and conventional method of fixing an injured organ. Therefore, evaluating the quality of life in trauma patients with splint immobilization is important. Methods: This prospective study was performed on 287 trauma patients with splint immobilization in two baseline periods and one month later in Haft-e-Tir and Rasoul-e-Akram hospitals. The Data collection tool was the SF-36 quality of life questionnaire. Paired t-test was used to assess the changes in the quality of life. SPSS version 21 was used for statistical analysis. Results: The mean quality of life in the study s first phase was 76.31 ± 9.42, and one month after splint immobilization was 76.13 ± 8.98, and there was no significant difference between the two phases. The Splint immobilization of the patients significantly affected the quality of life in 5 out of 8 dimensions. Still, the intervention increased the scores in 3 dimensions and decreased scores in 2 dimensions. The results showed that social performance (P = 0.01), energy and vitality (P 0.001), and emotional health (P 0.001) increased, and physical performance (P = 0.01) and general health (P = 0.001) decreased, and they were significantly different in the two phases. There were no significant differences between emotional limitation, physical limitation, and pain in the two phases of the study. Conclusions: Splint immobilization of patients improved the quality of life in 5 out of 8 dimensions. After a month, the trauma-related mental and physical shock did not disappear, and even the patients were more sensitive to quality-of-life questions due to time spent with splint immobilization and familiarity with its limitations. The patients tried to reflect on their dissatisfaction with splint immobilization.
Keywords :
Trauma , Splint , Quality of life , Immobilization
Journal title :
Shiraz E Medical Journal
Journal title :
Shiraz E Medical Journal
Record number :
2745291
Link To Document :
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