The Trauma Recovery Clinic: A Stepped Collaborative Care Model for Trauma Surgery Patients to Address Health Disparities

Document Type

Article

Publication Date

6-18-2024

Publication Title

The American Surgeon

Abstract

The Trauma Recovery Clinic (TRC) was developed to meet the psychiatric, psychological, and psychosocial needs of traumatically injured patients following discharge from a level-I trauma center. The objective of this study is to demonstrate the efficacy of the TRC as an application of the stepped collaborative care model in order to address health disparities. Patients with a history of inpatient treatment for a physically traumatic injury at this level-I trauma center were approached and enrolled at initial TRC outpatient appointments. Data was collected, including the PTSD Checklist-Civilian Version (PCL-C), the Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ-9), the Attitudes towards Guns scale, and the Youth Behavior Risk Survey (questions about weapon carrying practices). A total of 80 patients were included in this study. Patients expressed several social determinants of health risk factors, with 60% of the sample reporting witnessing someone being wounded or killed. Results demonstrated a significant decrease in trauma symptoms (T24 = 3.33; = .001, d = 0.67) and depressive symptoms (T24 = 2.23, = .02, d = 0.45) by their 6th clinic visit. Additionally, patients reported significant improvements in role limitations due to emotional problems (T25 = 1.74; = .04; d = 0.34) and social functioning (T25 = 2.23; = .02; d = 0.43). Interestingly, patients who reported carrying a weapon in the last 30 days reported significantly higher trauma symptoms (T64 = 3.21, = .002) and depressive symptoms (T64 = 2.77, = .007). This evaluation of services at the recently implemented Trauma Recovery Clinic demonstrated that the clinic is successfully treating individuals who have experienced traumatic injuries. More specifically, the clinic services are effectively engaging a vulnerable, hard-to-reach patient population.

PubMed ID

38889953

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