SynopsisThis study examines psychological symptomatology in a cohort of 72 heart transplant recipients followed longitudinally during their first year post-transplant. In keeping with research on other domains of life stressors and illnesses, a central study goal was to identify pre-transplant and perioperative psychosocial factors associated with increased vulnerability to, and maintenance of, elevated psychological distress levels post-transplant. Average anxiety and depression levels, but not anger–hostility symptoms, were substantially elevated in the early post-transplant period, relative to normative data. Average symptom levels improved significantly over time, although one-third of the sample continued to have high distress levels at all follow-up assessments. Recipients with any of seven psychosocial characteristics at initial interview were particularly susceptible to continued high average distress levels over time: a personal history of psychiatric disorder prior to transplant; younger age; lower social support from their primary family caregiver; exposure to recent major life events involving loss; poor self-esteem; a poor sense of mastery; and use of avoidance coping strategies to manage health problems. Recipients without such factors showed improvement in average distress levels across the assessment period. These effects were stronger for anxiety than depressive symptoms, with the exception of a sizeable relationship between loss events and subsequent depression. The findings suggest that clinical interventions designed to minimize prolonged emotional distress post-transplant need to be closely tailored to heart recipients' initial psychosocial assets and liabilities.
Firstrespondersareanoftenignoredgroupfacingemotionalandphysicalstressthatis similartothatoflawenforcementpersonnelandmilitaryveterans.Fiftyfirstresponder employeeswereinvitedtoparticipateinthestudy,ofwhich34completedthefollowing psychologicalandbiologicalmeasures:1)thePTSDChecklist-CivilianVersion(PCL-C); 2)StateTraitInventoryforCognitiveandSomaticAnxiety(STICSA);3)theCenterfor EpidemiologyStudiesDepressionScale(CES-D);4)thePittsburghSleepQualityIndex (PSQI);5)AlcoholUseDisordersIdentificationTest(AUDIT);6)CornellMusculoskeletal DiscomfortQuestionnaire(CMDQ);7)heartrateandbloodpressureduringtwo consecutivedays;8)bodymassindex(BMI);and9)salivarycortisolmeasuredonce. Amongparticipants,18%(n=6)metcriteriaforanxiety,47%fordepression(n=16)and 33%(n=12)forPTSD.Comparisonofstatisticalmodelsassessingthepredictivestrength ofphysicalandbehaviouralhealthmeasuresfoundPTSDtobethestrongestpredictor fordepression,anxiety,poorsleepquality,musculoskeletalpain,cortisolandBMI. AsubstantialportionoffirstrespondersmetcriteriaforPTSDandanxiety. Assessingtheimpactoftheseconditionsmaybestbeachievedthroughphysical healthmeasures(cortisol,BMI,heartrate)inadditiontopsychometricscreening tools(PCL,CESD,STICSA).
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.
customersupport@researchsolutions.com
10624 S. Eastern Ave., Ste. A-614
Henderson, NV 89052, USA
This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.
Copyright © 2025 scite LLC. All rights reserved.
Made with 💙 for researchers
Part of the Research Solutions Family.