Objective: Improve the quality of life of patients with severe hand trauma.
Materials And Method: A retrospective study was carried out from August, 1, 2017, to May 31, 2020, at the emergency department of a private clinic in Abidjan. Were included in this study all patients with severe hand trauma who had undergone emergency surgery with a quality-of-life assessment time of over six months after surgery. The data were reported on a structured and standardized survey form.
Results: We analyzed 36 patients, with average age of 38.6 years (min. 8, max. 71 years). The population study was predominantly male with a sex ratio of 17. 92% of patients were right-handed, and in 53% of cases, the trauma involved the dominant hand. 64.2% of the patients were manual workers. In 83.3% of the cases, the patients had no difficulty in writing. Patients had no difficulty in washing or drying their hair 88.9% of the time. Eighty-nine percent of the patients no longer felt pain. The patients didn't feel any weakness in the hand in 72.2% of the cases and in 63.9% of the cases there was no stiffness in the hand. Only 5.6% of the injured felt their health was poor and 83.3% of patients strongly disagree with feeling less valuable, less confident, or even less capable because of the trauma. 72% of patients were incapacitated for work between 5 and 15 weeks. 80.6% of trauma victims had no loss of income, and 88.9% of patients kept their previous jobs. 83.3% of patients did not experience any social discomfort.
Conclusion: The patients had a good quality of life despite the severity of hand injuries they had due to early and adequate management combined with good physiotherapy.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.anplas.2022.10.005 | DOI Listing |
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