Study design: Mixed retrospective-prospective cohort study. Objectives: To determine 2-year survival following discharge from hospital after spinal cord injury in Bangladesh. Setting: Bangladesh. Methods: Medical records were used to identify all patients admitted in 2011 with a recent spinal cord injury to the Centre for Rehabilitation of the Paralysed, a large Bangladeshi hospital that specialises in care of people with spinal cord injury. Patients or their families were subsequently visited or contacted by telephone in 2014. Vital status and, where relevant, date and cause of death were determined by verbal autopsy. Results: 350 of 371 people admitted with a recent spinal cord injury in 2011 were discharged alive from hospital. All but eleven were accounted for two years after discharge (97% follow-up). Two-year survival was 87% (95% CI 83% to 90%). Two-year survival of those who were wheelchair-dependent was 81% (95% CI 76% to 86%). The most common cause of death was sepsis due to pressure ulcers. Conclusion: In Bangladesh, approximately one in five people with spinal cord injury who are wheelchair-dependent die within two years of discharge from hospital. Most deaths are due to sepsis from potentially preventable pressure ulcers.
Study design: Mixed retrospective-prospective cohort study. Objectives: To determine psychological and socioeconomic status, complications and quality of life in people with spinal cord injuries (SCI) after discharge from a hospital in Bangladesh. Setting: Bangladesh. Methods: All patients admitted in 2011 with a recent SCI to a hospital in Bangladesh were identified. Patients were interviewed by telephone in 2014 using translated versions of the SF12, the SCI Secondary Conditions Scale, the Centre for Epidemiologic Studies Depression Scale (CESDS) and the Participation Component of the WHODAS. Questions were also asked about employment, living and financial situation, and opportunities to get out of bed and out of the house. Data were stratified by ability to walk on discharge.Results: A total of 350 people were discharged with a recent SCI in 2011. By 2014, 55 had died. Of those still living, 283 were interviewed (96% follow-up rate). At the time of interview, 47% of participants were employed. One-quarter (26%) of those who were wheelchair-dependent had a pressure ulcer. The mean (s.d.) scores for the Mental and Physical Component of the SF12 were 32.0 points (5.5) and 35.8 points (3.9), respectively. The median (interquartile range) scores for the SCI Secondary Conditions Scale, CESDS and WHODAS for those who were wheelchair-dependent were 15% (10 to 19), 11 points (9 to 18) and 26 points (23 to 26), respectively. Conclusion: Many people with SCI in Bangladesh are house-bound, unemployed, living in poverty and have pressure ulcers. They experience moderate rates of depression and report limited quality of life.
Depression is a multifaceted health issue with many personal, social, economic and health determinants and consequences. This study demonstrates that the prevalence of moderate-to-severe depression among working women in Bangladesh is quite high. Prevention and treatment of depression in developing countries and societies can reduce suffering, lower incidence of suicide, and prevent economic loss. Creating awareness on outsourced workers' poor mental health may help in developing initiatives to protect and preserve their well-being.
Participants scored low in total community integration and life satisfaction, suggesting there is a great need to develop interventions by governmental and non-governmental organizations to better integrate individuals with spinal cord injury in the community. Implications for Rehabilitation Government and non-government organizations should offer disability friendly public transportation facilities for individuals with spinal cord injury so that they can return to education, resume employment, and involve in social activities. Entrepreneurs and businesses should develop assistive devices featuring low technology, considering the rural structure and housing conditions in Bangladesh. Innovations being made in assistive technology should be supported by subsidies and grants. They should also plan to offer injury appropriate employment opportunities for individuals who suffer major injuries like spinal cord injury in Bangladesh. Housing facilities with accessible bathrooms, kitchens and stairs should be designed and offered for this population to improve their ability to self-care and decrease the dependence on caregivers for household tasks such as - cooking meals and taking care of children.
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