Stability in Personality After Physical Trauma.

J Burn Care Res

Department of Neuroscience Psychiatry, Uppsala University, Uppsala University Hospital, Sweden.

Published: May 2021

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study assessed personality trait stability in burn patients over one year post-injury, using the Swedish universities Scales of Personality.
  • Results showed that overall personality domain scores remained stable from acute care to 12 months later.
  • The only notable change was in the trait of Stress Susceptibility, which improved and normalized over time after the initial trauma.

Article Abstract

Personality trait stability may be influenced by several factors, there among different life events such as psychological trauma. However, little is known regarding trait stability after physical trauma. Therefore, our primary aim was to assess the extent of stability in personality in burn patients during the first year after injury. Eighty-four burn patients, admitted to a national burn center, were assessed with the Swedish universities Scales of Personality during acute care and 12 months postburn. Personality domain scores remained stable between acute care and 12 months postburn. On the trait level, the only change was seen in personality trait Stress Susceptibility, where burn patients' scores were lower compared with norm scores during acute care but then increased, and normalized, at 12 months postburn. To conclude, personality scores remained relatively stable during the first year after burn trauma.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/jbcr/iraa170DOI Listing

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