Study design: Longitudinal.
Objective: To investigate the relative importance of personality traits, emotional distress and pain as predictors of functional health status in patients with spinal cord injury (SCI) or multiple traumas (MTs).
Setting: Sunnaas Rehabilitation Hospital, Norway.
Methods: Data were obtained from SCI and MT patients at admission (n=101) and at discharge (n=87) from rehabilitation, as well as 4 years post injury (n=75). The primary outcome measure was the sickness impact profile (SIP). Personality traits, that is, dispositional optimism and positive/negative affectivity, were measured using the Life Orientation Test-Revised and the Positive Affect and Negative Affect Schedule, respectively.
Results: Using hierarchical regression analysis, dispositional optimism and pain emerged as the most robust predictors of functional health status. Generally, these two variables accounted for a substantial part of the variance (that is, 20-40%) in the SIP scales. Significant correlations between pain and anxiety/depression were found in all phases of the study, and at follow-up depression level appeared as an independent predictor of functional health.
Conclusion: The substantial predictive power, in terms of explained variance, of dispositional optimism, pain and depression/anxiety, indicates that these variables may be of practical-clinical importance in a rehabilitation setting. Specifically, patients characterized by low optimism, combined with presence of pain and depression/anxiety, may constitute a high-risk group for disability and reduced quality of life. On the other hand, high optimism should be regarded as a resilience characteristic, protecting the individual against long-term sequelae of severe physical injury.