Delayed Onset
PTSD After Auto Accidents
This study examined a group
of 158 patients who had been involved in a motor vehicle accident (MVA) and
who had sought medical attention within three days of the accident. The study
found that, at 1-4 months after the accident, 62 (39%) participants met the
diagnostic criteria for PTSD, while 96 did not. This group was again evaluated
at 12 months after the accident.
The authors found that
7 additional patients from the group of 96 non-PTSD patients now met the criteria
for PTSD. The study compared these seven patients to the acute onset PTSD, as
well as a group of 38 MVA patients who did not develop PTSD.
The researchers found that
the delayed onset PTSD patients had significantly lower levels of social support
at the time of the accident, and also showed poorer coping skills. Interestingly,
there was no relationship found between the groups in terms of injury severity.
“From our data one can
speculate that the physical injuries that patients received secondary to their
accident healed more quickly in the control group than in the delayed onset
group. Thus, it may be that nagging physical injuries serve as a constant
reminder of the trauma that helps to maintain, and in some cases exacerbate,
participant’s symptom presentations. Alternatively, it could be the case that
trauma victims suffering from PTSD symptomology are more sensitive to pain
and thus give higher self-report ratings of pain and physical problems when
questioned about the status of their injuries.”
No matter what the relationship,
PTSD symptoms can complicate MVA treatment and must be addressed.
Buckley TC, Blanchard
EB, Hickling EJ. A prospective examination of delayed onset PTSD secondary to
motor vehicle accidents. Journal of Abnormal Psychology 1996;105(4):617-625.
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