Twelve-month health outcomes for bicyclists and car occupants after a non-catastrophic traffic crash injury - 24/03/21
Highlights |
• | After a traffic crash, cyclists and car occupants with injuries demonstrate different recovery trajectories. |
• | Cyclists show greater improvement in pain severity than do car occupants. |
• | Prognostic indicators of long-term physical functioning and psychological well-being for cyclists were pre-injury and baseline quality of life and pain factors and injury location. |
Abstract |
Objective |
In this inception cohort study, we investigated differences in health outcomes for bicyclists (cyclists) and car occupants (car driver and passengers) at 12months after a non-catastrophic traffic injury. We also aimed to determine the independent predictors of key health outcomes among cyclists.
Methods |
Of the 2019 participants at baseline, 299 were cyclists and 927 were car occupants; 229 cyclists and 489 car occupants were followed up 12months after the injury. A telephone-administered questionnaire was used to obtain information on socio-economic, pre-injury health and injury-related characteristics. The survey also included tools on health outcomes: quality of life (SF-36 and EQ-5D-3L scales), pain severity, general psychological distress, trauma-related distress and pain catastrophizing.
Results |
After adjusting for all potential confounders, general psychological distress scores and trauma-related distress scores were 2.05 and 0.60 units lower for cyclists than car occupants (P=0.01 and P<0.0001, respectively) at 12-month follow-up. Cyclists showed greater improvement than car occupants over 12months in mean pain severity ratings and SF-12 physical component summary (PCS) score (both P<0.0001) but had lower mean pain severity and similar PCS scores at baseline. However, cyclists showed less improvement in SF-12 mental component summary (MCS) scores (P=0.03) than car occupants but had higher mean MCS scores at baseline. Pre-injury and baseline quality-of-life scores and pain catastrophizing as well as injury involving the head or face were significant predictors of overall psychological functioning, general psychological distress and trauma-related distress in cyclists at 12months.
Conclusions |
Cyclists demonstrated better recovery than car occupants at 12months after sustaining a traffic crash injury. Prognostic indicators of long-term physical functioning and psychological well-being in cyclists were related to pre-injury and baseline quality of life and pain factors and injury location.
Le texte complet de cet article est disponible en PDF.Keywords : Cyclists, Car occupants, Traffic injury, Health outcomes
Plan
Vol 64 - N° 2
Article 101368- mars 2021 Retour au numéroBienvenue sur EM-consulte, la référence des professionnels de santé.