Study design: Narrative review OBJECTIVES: Sir Ludwig Guttmann realised spinal cord injury (SCI) rehabilitation should incorporate more than a biomedical approach if SCI patients were to adjust to their injury and achieve productive social re-integration. He introduced components into rehabilitation he believed would assist his patients build physical strength as well as psychological resilience that would help them re-engage with their communities. We pay tribute to Sir Ludwig by presenting research that has focussed on psychosocial factors that contribute to adjustment dynamics after SCI.
Setting: Not applicable.
Methods: Five factors with a psychosocial source will be examined, featured in my research, namely psychological distress, cognitive impairment, pain catastrophizing, sleep disorder and fatigue. A multifactorial model of adjustment will be examined.
Results: Evidence shows these factors can be significant barriers to adjustment and reciprocally related to self-efficacy and life decisions. A theoretical rehabilitation framework/model is presented called the SCI Adjustment Model (SCIAM), that explains the process of adjustment dynamics. It describes how multifactorial factors contribute to adjustment in a non-linear process over time.
Conclusions: Key clinical messages include: (i) adjustment dynamics will be enhanced if viewed through the lens of a multifactorial model that clarifies how multiple psychosocial factors can combine and act as barriers or facilitators to adjustment; (ii) judiciously using this information, assess and then strategize to reduce the influence of barriers or strengthen facilitators during SCI rehabilitation and beyond, and (iii) integrate psychosocial guidelines and a person-centred approach into SCI rehabilitation to achieve treatment goals.
© 2025. The Author(s).