Sw. Charlifue et al., Longitudinal outcomes in spinal cord injury: Aging, secondary conditions, and well-being, ARCH PHYS M, 80(11), 1999, pp. 1429-1434
Objective: To specify the degree to which current age, duration of injury,
and neurologic status affect the frequency of secondary health and psychoso
cial conditions in persons with long-term spinal cord injury (SCI), using b
oth longitudinal and cross-sectional analysis techniques.
Design: Prospective longitudinal examination and data collection involving
individuals with SCI studied initially at their 5th, 10th, and 15th anniver
saries postinjury, and subsequently 5 years later at their 10th, 15th, and
20th anniversaries postinjury.
Setting: Five Regional Model Spinal Cord Injury Systems.
Participants: The 439 individuals who meet the inclusion criteria for the N
ational SCI Database and who are enrolled in a longitudinal study of second
ary conditions and SCI.
Main Outcome Measures: Physical and psychosocial status at various times po
stinjury.
Results: There are different reports of various conditions when analyzing b
y neurologic groups, duration of injury, and age. Cross-sectional and longi
tudinal analyses also demonstrate different patterns of complications.
Conclusions: The longitudinal method, like cross-sectional research, allows
for identification of physical and psychosocial changes soon after they oc
cur. Longitudinal research, however, also makes possible the development of
predictive models for various long-term outcomes. (C) 1999 by the American
Congress of Rehabilitation Medicine and the American Academy of Physical M
edicine and Rehabilitation.