Mental health outcomes and rehabilitation challenges in children with orthopedic trauma: a public health survey from a pediatric rehabilitation center
Shuyue Zheng, Lijie Cheng, Xiaoyu Zhao, Jihong Fang, Dunhui Li, Fengqin Wu

TL;DR
This study examines mental health and rehabilitation challenges in Chinese children with orthopedic injuries, finding that rural residence and socioeconomic factors worsen outcomes.
Contribution
The study identifies multilevel determinants and causal pathways linking socioeconomic factors to mental health and rehabilitation outcomes in pediatric orthopedic trauma patients.
Findings
Rural Hukou status independently predicts higher PTSD and lower quality of life in children with orthopedic trauma.
Early rehabilitation within 14 days reduces PTSD and pain, improving recovery outcomes.
A rural high-risk subgroup with elevated mental health issues highlights the need for targeted psychosocial interventions.
Abstract
This study aimed to assess mental health outcomes and rehabilitation challenges among Chinese children with orthopedic trauma and to identify multilevel determinants and causal pathways underlying these outcomes. A single-center cross-sectional survey, supplemented by a 1-year prospective follow-up, was conducted among children enrolled at Anhui Provincial Children’s Hospital, China. Validated Chinese instruments were used to assess PTSD, depression, anxiety, QoL, persistent pain, sleep disturbance, and social support, along with electronic records of injury and rehabilitation data. Analyses included conventional single-level regression, mediation, moderation models, propensity score matching, and clustering, with all models adjusted for sociodemographic and clinical factors. Among 2,103 children with orthopedic trauma, the prevalence of PTSD, depression, and anxiety was not directly…
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Taxonomy
TopicsChild and Adolescent Health · Trauma and Emergency Care Studies · Nursing Roles and Practices
