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Predictive Factors of PTSD in Adults Admitted to an Emergency Service (ISSUE)

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Civil Hospices of Lyon

Status

Completed

Conditions

Psychiatric Issue
Post Traumatic Stress Disorder

Treatments

Other: Filling questionnaires

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT03615014
69HCL18_0142

Details and patient eligibility

About

After trauma or stress factor like death exposition, serious injuries or sexual violence, some patients may develop stress reaction characterized by the presence of various symptoms among different categories (reviviscence, negative humor, dissociates symptoms, occasion, hypervigilance). In the month following trauma, the investigators speak of acute stress reaction (ASR) when symptoms are present during at least three days. If symptoms are present one month after trauma, then it is a post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD).

Among patients visiting emergency after latest trauma, quite a few is in acute stress reaction. However, this reaction is often incorrectly identified by healthcare team, due to lack of oriented medical examination, patients visiting about other complaints (pain, insomnia) and not expressing clearly the trauma context. Yet, it is know that acute stress reaction occurrence and existence of dissociate symptoms after trauma confrontation is considerably predictive of the eventual post-traumatic stress disorder occurrence.

The identification of risk population of post-traumatic stress disorder is not the subject of any particular structured procedure in emergency services while early care of these patients may allow limiting post-traumatic stress disorder occurrence and associate consequences. Previous works on the subject having exclusively targeted some trauma subgroups or some predictive factors subtypes, investigators propose here biopsychosocial global approach that can weight the impact of each parameters.

In this study, investigators aim at determining predictive biopsychosocial factors of the post-traumatic stress disorder occurrence at 3 months in patients visiting emergency after latest trauma (less than one month old) and identified as "high-risk" to develop post-traumatic stress disorder (moderate or high).

Enrollment

460 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18 to 70 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Man or woman aged between 18 and 70

  • Admitted in an emergency service after a trauma less than one month old, defined by death exposition or death threat, serious injury or sexual violence, by one or several of the following;

    • Being directly exposed ;
    • Being direct witness of traumatic event that occurred to other people;
    • Hearing that traumatic event arrived to close family member or close friend. In the case of death penalty or death threat of a family member or a friend, events must have been violent or accidental.
    • Being exposed repeatedly or extremely to aversive characteristics of trauma events (for example: first line actors gathering human remains, cops exposed several times to kid sexual abuse explicit fact).
  • Written informed-consent

  • Affiliation to the French social security scheme or beneficiary of a similar scheme

Exclusion criteria

  • Patient not understanding French language
  • Patient under guardianship
  • Clinical instability making impossible the realization of questionnaires (for example: agitation, vital risk, disorders of consciousness…)

Trial design

Primary purpose

Other

Allocation

N/A

Interventional model

Single Group Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

460 participants in 1 patient group

Patients having trauma
Other group
Description:
Adults patients having trauma in the month before visiting emergency will fill questionnaires
Treatment:
Other: Filling questionnaires

Trial contacts and locations

5

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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