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Articles

Global and domain-specific self-esteem after pediatric traumatic brain injury: Contribution of injury characteristics and parent mental health

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Pages 1835-1853 | Received 05 Sep 2021, Accepted 02 Mar 2022, Published online: 14 Mar 2022
 

ABSTRACT

This prospective, longitudinal case–control study examined global and domain-specific aspects of self-esteem 6-months following pediatric traumatic brain injury (TBI) and evaluated the contribution of injury-related factors and parent mental health to child self-esteem. Participants included 103 children with mild-severe TBI representing consecutive admissions to the emergency department of the Royal Children’s Hospital, Melbourne, Australia. Forty-three age-and-sex matched typically developing controls were recruited for comparison. Information regarding injury characteristics including age at injury and clinical indicators of TBI severity were collected for participants at recruitment, with research magnetic resonance imaging conducted 2–8 weeks later. At 6 months post-injury, children rated their global and domain-specific self-esteem (Harter Self-Perception Profile for Children), and ratings of parent mental health were collected (General Health Questionnaire). Self-esteem for behavioural and academic domains was significantly poorer for children with TBI relative to TD children. In the TBI group, higher child-rated scores of global and domain-specific aspects of self-esteem were associated with more severe TBI, presence of frontal neuropathology, younger age at injury, and lower parental symptoms of anxiety/insomnia. Given the psychological status of parents represents a potentially modifiable risk factor, it may form the target of clinical interventions designed to bolster child self-esteem following pediatric TBI.

Acknowledgments

The authors wish to acknowledge all children and families who participated in the study.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).

Data availability statement

Source data will not be made available since no patient approval was obtained for sharing anonymized data. However, detailed analytic methods and study materials, including output files of statistical analyses, will be made available to other researchers on request to the first author.

Additional information

Funding

This work was supported by a grant from the Victoria Neurotrauma Initiative (CO6E1) in Australia, a NHMRC Practitioner Fellowship (to V.A.), and the Victorian Operational Infrastructure Scheme. The funding bodies did not play a role in the design of the study, analysis, interpretation of the data, or writing of the article.

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