Document Type
Article
Publication Date
2-10-2025
Publisher
American Psychological Association
Source Publication
Traumatology
Source ISSN
1534-7656
Abstract
Following a traumatic injury, individuals are at higher risk for the development of psychological and physical health problems, such as posttraumatic stress, while the incidence and precipitating factors that lead to these negative outcomes continue to be a popular area of research. By contrast, an estimated two-thirds of survivors remain unaffected by these outcomes and are qualified as “resilient.” Despite its prevalence, significantly less is known about factors associated with resilience following traumatic injury, including the development of posttraumatic growth (PTG), a unique outcome associated with experiencing positive outcomes. Although prior reviews have documented the incidence and unique ways in which PTG manifests in other trauma samples, less is known about PTG in traumatic injury survivors. Here, a scoping review was conducted: four databases of peer-reviewed articles available in English were queried, and 31 articles describing PTG in traumatic injury samples were reviewed. This scoping review summarizes the incidence of PTG in traumatic injury survivors and describes its associated sociodemographic and injury factors, qualitative findings, relationship with psychopathology, quality of life, coping strategies, and treatment outcomes. In addition, we call attention to affective and cognitive processes associated with PTG as it manifests specifically to traumatic injury survivors. Implications for future research and clinical application are discussed. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2025 APA, all rights reserved)
Recommended Citation
Davis, Kaley E.; Bennett, Meghan M.; and Fitzgerald, Jacklynn M., "Posttraumatic Growth Among Traumatic Injury Survivors" (2025). Psychology Faculty Research and Publications. 608.
https://epublications.marquette.edu/psych_fac/608
Comments
Accepted version. Traumatology (advance online publication, February 10, 2025) DOI. © 2025 American Psychological Association. Used with permission.