4.3 Article

Rehabilitation Needs at 5 Years Post-Traumatic Brain Injury: A VA TBI Model Systems Study

Journal

JOURNAL OF HEAD TRAUMA REHABILITATION
Volume 36, Issue 3, Pages 175-185

Publisher

LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS
DOI: 10.1097/HTR.0000000000000629

Keywords

brain injuries; military personnel; rehabilitation; traumatic; Veterans

Funding

  1. VHA Central Office VA TBI Model Systems Program of Research
  2. General Dynamics Information Technology from the Defense and Veterans Brain Injury Center [W91YTZ-13-C-0015, HT0014-19-C-0004]
  3. National Institute on Disability, Independent Living, and Rehabilitation Research [90DPTB00070, 90DRTB0002, 90DPTB0009]
  4. NIDILRR [90DPTB0009, 1004326] Funding Source: Federal RePORTER

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The study highlights the ongoing rehabilitation needs of veterans and service members at 5 years post-TBI, with factors such as Black race and environmental barriers predicting unmet needs. Individuals with greater unmet needs identified physical environment, informational sources, social attitudes, healthcare access, public policy, transportation availability, and in-home assistance as the most frequent environmental barriers.
Objective: Describe rehabilitation needs and factors associated with unmet needs at 5 years post-traumatic brain injury (TBI). Setting: Five Veterans Affairs (VA) polytrauma rehabilitation centers (PRCs). Participants: VA TBI Model Systems participants (N = 283; 96% male, 75%, 57% severe TBI). Design: Prospective observational cohort. Main Measures: Rehabilitation Needs Survey (21-item survey that assesses cognitive, emotional, social, and functional needs); Craig Hospital Inventory of Environmental Factors (25-item survey of potential environmental barriers). Results: Participants endorsed a mean of 8 (SD: 6.2) ongoing and 3 (SD: 4.7) unmet rehabilitation needs at 5 years post-TBI. Approximately 65% of participants reported at least 1 rehabilitation need that remained unmet. The number and nature of needs differed across TBI severity groups. In unadjusted and adjusted linear regression models, Black race and environmental barriers (Craig Hospital Inventory of Environmental Factors total score) were predictive of unmet needs (P < .001). Those with greater unmet needs reported the physical environment (54%-63%), informational sources (54%), social attitudes (55%), healthcare access (40%), public policy (32%-37%), transportation availability (33%), and in-home assistance (32%) as the most frequent environmental barriers at 5 years post-TBI. Conclusion: Veterans and Service Members continue to have rehabilitation needs at 5 years post-TBI. Veterans Affairs programs to address ongoing needs and policy to support them are needed.

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