Perceived Social Support and Its Impact on Mental Fatigue in Patients with Mild Traumatic Brain Injury
Perceived Social Support and Its Impact on Mental Fatigue in Patients with Mild Traumatic Brain Injury
Results: There were 65.1%, 37.1%, 34.8% and 32.5% individuals being identified as those with mental fatigue at 1 week, 3, 6 and 12 months, respectively. The scores of MFS didn't change substantially since 3 months post-injury. Compared to non-fatigued MTBI patients, those with long-lasting post- MTBI fatigue reported ex- tremely lower level of perceived social support. More- over, improved social support at 1 week was negatively associated with the occurrence of long-lasting fatigue. Conclusion: Sufficient social support could signifi- cantly decrease the occurrence of long-lasting men- tal fatigue among MTBI cases. It seemed of great importance to modify the emphasis of rehabilitation to include assessment and improvement of perceived social support at earlier stages after injury.
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