Creating Value by Prioritizing Mental and Social Health After Injury

J Orthop Trauma. 2019 Nov:33 Suppl 7:S32-S37. doi: 10.1097/BOT.0000000000001611.

Abstract

Given the strong influence of mental and social health on symptom intensity and magnitude of limitations, attempts to increase value in orthopedic trauma must attend to emotional and social recovery. Low value and potentially harmful interventions after trauma such as excessive reliance on medication, low value surgeries for "delayed healing" or "symptomatic implants," repeated visits with a physical therapist, and other biomedical interventions often reflect misdiagnosis and mismanagement of social and mental health. A better approach is to anticipate emotional and social recovery; to get social and mental health specialists involved immediately after injury; and to develop strategies that set firm limits on biomedical tests and treatments that are unlikely to contribute to health and risk reinforcing stress, distress, and less effective coping strategies.

MeSH terms

  • Adaptation, Psychological
  • Emotions
  • Fractures, Bone / complications
  • Fractures, Bone / psychology*
  • Fractures, Bone / therapy*
  • Health Priorities*
  • Humans
  • Mental Health*
  • Recovery of Function