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The impact of head injury neurobehavioural sequelae on personal relationships: preliminary findings.

The impact of head injury neurobehavioural sequelae on personal relationships: preliminary findings.
The impact of head injury neurobehavioural sequelae on personal relationships: preliminary findings.
Background: Existing evidence suggests that neurobehavioural disability is a frequent legacy of serious head trauma and has a major impact on the psychological well-being of relatives and friends of people with brain injuries.
Objective: To explore which neurobehavioural legacies of serious head trauma have the greatest impact on personal relationships and increase the risk of relationship breakdown.
Method: Forty-eight partners of people who had suffered serious head trauma were asked to complete a 12-item measure to rate how different neurobehavioural characteristics had adversely affected their relationship with the brain injured person. Twenty-three couples who had divorced or separated from their injured partner in the years following injury comprised the ‘separated’ group, 25 still in the relationship at the time data were collected comprised the ‘together’ group.
Results: Even though many neurobehavioural characteristics of brain injury were reported by partners of both the separated and the together group as placing a strain on the relationship only mood swings accounted for a significant between groups difference [t(40.13)?=?3.33, p?=?0.002]. The magnitude of the difference in the means was large (?2?=?0.19).
Conclusions: Unpredictable patterns of behaviour, as perceived by partners of brain injured individuals, impose the greatest burden on personal relationships and may contribute to relationship breakdown.
brain injury, personal relationships, neurobehavioural sequelae
845-851
Wood, R. Ll.
8d28fa04-1370-43ab-abd5-1c22fb9cce83
Liossi, C.
fd401ad6-581a-4a31-a60b-f8671ffd3558
Wood, L.
ad6746ad-7b7d-4386-862a-c6ffa94adacb
Wood, R. Ll.
8d28fa04-1370-43ab-abd5-1c22fb9cce83
Liossi, C.
fd401ad6-581a-4a31-a60b-f8671ffd3558
Wood, L.
ad6746ad-7b7d-4386-862a-c6ffa94adacb

Wood, R. Ll., Liossi, C. and Wood, L. (2005) The impact of head injury neurobehavioural sequelae on personal relationships: preliminary findings. Brain Injury, 19 (10), 845-851. (doi:10.1080/02699050500058778).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background: Existing evidence suggests that neurobehavioural disability is a frequent legacy of serious head trauma and has a major impact on the psychological well-being of relatives and friends of people with brain injuries.
Objective: To explore which neurobehavioural legacies of serious head trauma have the greatest impact on personal relationships and increase the risk of relationship breakdown.
Method: Forty-eight partners of people who had suffered serious head trauma were asked to complete a 12-item measure to rate how different neurobehavioural characteristics had adversely affected their relationship with the brain injured person. Twenty-three couples who had divorced or separated from their injured partner in the years following injury comprised the ‘separated’ group, 25 still in the relationship at the time data were collected comprised the ‘together’ group.
Results: Even though many neurobehavioural characteristics of brain injury were reported by partners of both the separated and the together group as placing a strain on the relationship only mood swings accounted for a significant between groups difference [t(40.13)?=?3.33, p?=?0.002]. The magnitude of the difference in the means was large (?2?=?0.19).
Conclusions: Unpredictable patterns of behaviour, as perceived by partners of brain injured individuals, impose the greatest burden on personal relationships and may contribute to relationship breakdown.

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More information

Published date: 2005
Keywords: brain injury, personal relationships, neurobehavioural sequelae

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 40271
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/40271
PURE UUID: f64c1c63-1808-4b0b-9fc3-32638e14caf4
ORCID for C. Liossi: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-0627-6377

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Date deposited: 03 Jul 2006
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 03:48

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Author: R. Ll. Wood
Author: C. Liossi ORCID iD
Author: L. Wood

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