Traumatic Brain Injury History Among Individuals Using Mental Health and Addictions Services: A Scoping Review. Davies, J., Dinyarian, C., Wheeler, A. L., Dale, C. M., & Cleverley, K. The Journal of Head Trauma Rehabilitation. Paper doi abstract bibtex Objective: Traumatic brain injury (TBI) has been increasingly linked in population research to psychiatric problems as well as substance use and related harms, suggesting that individuals with TBI may also present more frequently to mental health and addictions (MHA) services. Little is known, however, about TBI history among MHA service users. The objectives of this review were to understand (i) the prevalence of TBI history among MHA service users; (ii) how TBI history is identified in MHA service settings; and (iii) predictors or outcomes of TBI that have been reported in MHA service users. Methods: A scoping review was conducted in accordance with PRISMA Scoping Review Extension guidelines. A search for relevant literature was conducted in MEDLINE, PsycINFO, SPORTDiscus, CINAHL, and Embase as well as various gray literature sources. Results: Twenty-eight relevant studies were identified. TBI was defined and operationalized heterogeneously between studies, and TBI history prevalence rates ranged considerably among the study samples. The included studies used varied methods to identify TBI history in MHA settings, such as clinical chart audits, single-item questions, or structured questionnaires (eg, Brain Injury Screening Questionnaire or Ohio State University TBI Identification Method). TBI history was most consistently associated with indicators of more severe substance use problems and mental health symptoms as well as increased aggression or risk to others. Studies reported less consistent findings regarding the relationship of TBI to physical health, cognitive impairment, functioning, risk to self, and type of psychiatric diagnosis. Conclusion: Screening for TBI history in MHA settings may contribute important information for risk assessment and care planning. However, to be clinically useful, assessment of TBI history will require consistent operationalization of TBI as well as use of validated screening methods.
@article{davies_traumatic_nodate,
title = {Traumatic {Brain} {Injury} {History} {Among} {Individuals} {Using} {Mental} {Health} and {Addictions} {Services}: {A} {Scoping} {Review}},
issn = {0885-9701},
shorttitle = {Traumatic {Brain} {Injury} {History} {Among} {Individuals} {Using} {Mental} {Health} and {Addictions} {Services}},
url = {https://journals.lww.com/headtraumarehab/Fulltext/9900/Traumatic_Brain_Injury_History_Among_Individuals.5.aspx},
doi = {10.1097/HTR.0000000000000780},
abstract = {Objective:
Traumatic brain injury (TBI) has been increasingly linked in population research to psychiatric problems as well as substance use and related harms, suggesting that individuals with TBI may also present more frequently to mental health and addictions (MHA) services. Little is known, however, about TBI history among MHA service users. The objectives of this review were to understand (i) the prevalence of TBI history among MHA service users; (ii) how TBI history is identified in MHA service settings; and (iii) predictors or outcomes of TBI that have been reported in MHA service users.
Methods:
A scoping review was conducted in accordance with PRISMA Scoping Review Extension guidelines. A search for relevant literature was conducted in MEDLINE, PsycINFO, SPORTDiscus, CINAHL, and Embase as well as various gray literature sources.
Results:
Twenty-eight relevant studies were identified. TBI was defined and operationalized heterogeneously between studies, and TBI history prevalence rates ranged considerably among the study samples. The included studies used varied methods to identify TBI history in MHA settings, such as clinical chart audits, single-item questions, or structured questionnaires (eg, Brain Injury Screening Questionnaire or Ohio State University TBI Identification Method). TBI history was most consistently associated with indicators of more severe substance use problems and mental health symptoms as well as increased aggression or risk to others. Studies reported less consistent findings regarding the relationship of TBI to physical health, cognitive impairment, functioning, risk to self, and type of psychiatric diagnosis.
Conclusion:
Screening for TBI history in MHA settings may contribute important information for risk assessment and care planning. However, to be clinically useful, assessment of TBI history will require consistent operationalization of TBI as well as use of validated screening methods.},
language = {en-US},
urldate = {2022-05-02},
journal = {The Journal of Head Trauma Rehabilitation},
author = {Davies, Julia and Dinyarian, Camellia and Wheeler, Anne L. and Dale, Craig M. and Cleverley, Kristin},
keywords = {Brain Injuries -- Diagnosis, Brain Injuries -- Epidemiology, Brain Injuries -- Risk Factors, CINAHL Database, Checklists, Chi Square Test, Descriptive Statistics, Embase, Gray Literature, Human, Medline, Mental Health Services, Psycinfo, Questionnaires, Risk Assessment, Scoping Review, SportDiscus, Substance Use Rehabilitation Programs, Treatment Outcomes},
pages = {10.1097/HTR.0000000000000780},
}
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{"_id":"p6GGSGFtby8MeiGSd","bibbaseid":"davies-dinyarian-wheeler-dale-cleverley-traumaticbraininjuryhistoryamongindividualsusingmentalhealthandaddictionsservicesascopingreview","author_short":["Davies, J.","Dinyarian, C.","Wheeler, A. L.","Dale, C. M.","Cleverley, K."],"bibdata":{"bibtype":"article","type":"article","title":"Traumatic Brain Injury History Among Individuals Using Mental Health and Addictions Services: A Scoping Review","issn":"0885-9701","shorttitle":"Traumatic Brain Injury History Among Individuals Using Mental Health and Addictions Services","url":"https://journals.lww.com/headtraumarehab/Fulltext/9900/Traumatic_Brain_Injury_History_Among_Individuals.5.aspx","doi":"10.1097/HTR.0000000000000780","abstract":"Objective: Traumatic brain injury (TBI) has been increasingly linked in population research to psychiatric problems as well as substance use and related harms, suggesting that individuals with TBI may also present more frequently to mental health and addictions (MHA) services. Little is known, however, about TBI history among MHA service users. The objectives of this review were to understand (i) the prevalence of TBI history among MHA service users; (ii) how TBI history is identified in MHA service settings; and (iii) predictors or outcomes of TBI that have been reported in MHA service users. Methods: A scoping review was conducted in accordance with PRISMA Scoping Review Extension guidelines. A search for relevant literature was conducted in MEDLINE, PsycINFO, SPORTDiscus, CINAHL, and Embase as well as various gray literature sources. Results: Twenty-eight relevant studies were identified. TBI was defined and operationalized heterogeneously between studies, and TBI history prevalence rates ranged considerably among the study samples. The included studies used varied methods to identify TBI history in MHA settings, such as clinical chart audits, single-item questions, or structured questionnaires (eg, Brain Injury Screening Questionnaire or Ohio State University TBI Identification Method). TBI history was most consistently associated with indicators of more severe substance use problems and mental health symptoms as well as increased aggression or risk to others. Studies reported less consistent findings regarding the relationship of TBI to physical health, cognitive impairment, functioning, risk to self, and type of psychiatric diagnosis. Conclusion: Screening for TBI history in MHA settings may contribute important information for risk assessment and care planning. However, to be clinically useful, assessment of TBI history will require consistent operationalization of TBI as well as use of validated screening methods.","language":"en-US","urldate":"2022-05-02","journal":"The Journal of Head Trauma Rehabilitation","author":[{"propositions":[],"lastnames":["Davies"],"firstnames":["Julia"],"suffixes":[]},{"propositions":[],"lastnames":["Dinyarian"],"firstnames":["Camellia"],"suffixes":[]},{"propositions":[],"lastnames":["Wheeler"],"firstnames":["Anne","L."],"suffixes":[]},{"propositions":[],"lastnames":["Dale"],"firstnames":["Craig","M."],"suffixes":[]},{"propositions":[],"lastnames":["Cleverley"],"firstnames":["Kristin"],"suffixes":[]}],"keywords":"Brain Injuries – Diagnosis, Brain Injuries – Epidemiology, Brain Injuries – Risk Factors, CINAHL Database, Checklists, Chi Square Test, Descriptive Statistics, Embase, Gray Literature, Human, Medline, Mental Health Services, Psycinfo, Questionnaires, Risk Assessment, Scoping Review, SportDiscus, Substance Use Rehabilitation Programs, Treatment Outcomes","pages":"10.1097/HTR.0000000000000780","bibtex":"@article{davies_traumatic_nodate,\n\ttitle = {Traumatic {Brain} {Injury} {History} {Among} {Individuals} {Using} {Mental} {Health} and {Addictions} {Services}: {A} {Scoping} {Review}},\n\tissn = {0885-9701},\n\tshorttitle = {Traumatic {Brain} {Injury} {History} {Among} {Individuals} {Using} {Mental} {Health} and {Addictions} {Services}},\n\turl = {https://journals.lww.com/headtraumarehab/Fulltext/9900/Traumatic_Brain_Injury_History_Among_Individuals.5.aspx},\n\tdoi = {10.1097/HTR.0000000000000780},\n\tabstract = {Objective: \n Traumatic brain injury (TBI) has been increasingly linked in population research to psychiatric problems as well as substance use and related harms, suggesting that individuals with TBI may also present more frequently to mental health and addictions (MHA) services. Little is known, however, about TBI history among MHA service users. The objectives of this review were to understand (i) the prevalence of TBI history among MHA service users; (ii) how TBI history is identified in MHA service settings; and (iii) predictors or outcomes of TBI that have been reported in MHA service users.\n Methods: \n A scoping review was conducted in accordance with PRISMA Scoping Review Extension guidelines. A search for relevant literature was conducted in MEDLINE, PsycINFO, SPORTDiscus, CINAHL, and Embase as well as various gray literature sources.\n Results: \n Twenty-eight relevant studies were identified. TBI was defined and operationalized heterogeneously between studies, and TBI history prevalence rates ranged considerably among the study samples. The included studies used varied methods to identify TBI history in MHA settings, such as clinical chart audits, single-item questions, or structured questionnaires (eg, Brain Injury Screening Questionnaire or Ohio State University TBI Identification Method). TBI history was most consistently associated with indicators of more severe substance use problems and mental health symptoms as well as increased aggression or risk to others. Studies reported less consistent findings regarding the relationship of TBI to physical health, cognitive impairment, functioning, risk to self, and type of psychiatric diagnosis.\n Conclusion: \n Screening for TBI history in MHA settings may contribute important information for risk assessment and care planning. However, to be clinically useful, assessment of TBI history will require consistent operationalization of TBI as well as use of validated screening methods.},\n\tlanguage = {en-US},\n\turldate = {2022-05-02},\n\tjournal = {The Journal of Head Trauma Rehabilitation},\n\tauthor = {Davies, Julia and Dinyarian, Camellia and Wheeler, Anne L. and Dale, Craig M. and Cleverley, Kristin},\n\tkeywords = {Brain Injuries -- Diagnosis, Brain Injuries -- Epidemiology, Brain Injuries -- Risk Factors, CINAHL Database, Checklists, Chi Square Test, Descriptive Statistics, Embase, Gray Literature, Human, Medline, Mental Health Services, Psycinfo, Questionnaires, Risk Assessment, Scoping Review, SportDiscus, Substance Use Rehabilitation Programs, Treatment Outcomes},\n\tpages = {10.1097/HTR.0000000000000780},\n}\n\n","author_short":["Davies, J.","Dinyarian, C.","Wheeler, A. L.","Dale, C. 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