Psychiatric and Psychosocial Predictors of Medical Outcome After Liver Transplantation: a Prospective, Single-Center Study


Autoria(s): Telles-Correia, D; Barbosa, A; Mega, I; Barroso, E; Monteiro, E
Data(s)

20/02/2015

20/02/2015

2011

Resumo

OBJECTIVE: Recognizing the potential impact of psychiatric and psychosocial factors on liver transplant patient outcomes is essential to apply special follow-up for more vulnerable patients. The aim of this article was to investigate the psychiatric and psychosocial factors predicted medical outcomes of liver transplanted patients. METHODS: We studied 150 consecutive transplant candidates, attending our outpatient transplantation clinic, including 84 who had been grafted 11 of whom died and 3 retransplanted. RESULTS: We observed that active coping was an important predictor of length of stay after liver transplantation. Neuroticism and social support were important predictors of mortality after liver transplantation. CONCLUSION: It may be useful to identify patients with low scores for active coping and for social support and high scores for neuroticism to design special modes of follow-up to improve their medical outcomes.

Identificador

Transplant Proc. 2011 Jan-Feb;43(1):155-7

http://hdl.handle.net/10400.17/2017

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

Elsevier

Direitos

openAccess

Palavras-Chave #HCC CHBPT #Adaptation, Psychological #Length of Stay #Liver Transplantation/adverse effects #Liver Transplantation/mortality #Liver Transplantation/psychology #Quality of Life #Social Support #Treatment Outcome
Tipo

article