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Dive into the research topics where Charlène Tournier is active.

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Featured researches published by Charlène Tournier.


The Journal of Rheumatology | 2014

One Year After Mild Injury: Comparison of Health Status and Quality of Life Between Patients with Whiplash Versus Other Injuries

Martine Hours; Inès Khati; Pierrette Charnay; Laetitia Chossegros; Hélène Tardy; Charlène Tournier; Anne-Laure Perrine; Jacques Luauté; Bernard Laumon

Objective. To compare health status, effect on family, occupational consequences, and quality of life (QOL) 1 year after an accident between patients with whiplash versus other mild injuries, and to explore the relationship between initial injury (whiplash vs other) and QOL. Methods. This was a prospective cohort study. The study used data from the ESPARR cohort (a representative cohort of road accident victims) and included 173 individuals with “pure” whiplash and 207 with other mild injuries. QOL at 1-year followup was assessed on the World Health Organization Quality of Life questionnaire. Correlations between explanatory variables and QOL were explored by Poisson regression to provide adjusted relative risks, with ANOVA for the various QOL scores explored. Results. One year post-accident, more patients who had whiplash than other casualties complained of nonrecovery of health status (56% vs 43%) and of the occupational effect of pain (31% vs 23%). QOL and posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) were similar in the 2 groups. Impaired QOL did not correlate with whiplash when models were adjusted on sociodemographic variables and history of psychological distress. Whatever the initial lesion, PTSD was a determining factor for poorer QOL. Conclusion. Sociodemographic factors, preaccident psychological history prior to the accident, and PTSD were the main factors influencing QOL, rather than whether the injury was whiplash. PTSD may also be related to pain.


Accident Analysis & Prevention | 2014

A few seconds to have an accident, a long time to recover: Consequences for road accident victims from the ESPARR cohort 2 years after the accident

Charlène Tournier; Pierrette Charnay; Hélène Tardy; Laetitia Chossegros; Laurent Carnis; Martine Hours

OBJECTIVE The aim of the present study was to describe the consequences of a road accident in adults, taking account of the type of road user, and to determine predictive factors for consequences at 2 years. DESIGN Prospective follow-up study. METHODS The cohort was composed of 1168 victims of road traffic accidents, aged ≥16 years. Two years after the accident, 912 victims completed a self-administered questionnaire. Weighted logistic regression models were implemented to compare casualties still reporting impact related to the accident versus those reporting no residual impact. Five outcomes were analysed: unrecovered health status, impact on occupation or studies, on familial or affective life, on leisure or sport activities and but also the financial difficulties related to the accident. RESULTS 46.1% of respondents were motorised four-wheel users, 29.6% motorised two-wheel (including quad) users, 13.3% pedestrians (including inline skate and push scooter users) and 11.1% cyclists. 53.3% reported unrecovered health status, 32.0% persisting impact on occupation or studies, 25.2% on familial or affective life, 46.9% on leisure or sport activities and 20.2% still had accident-related financial difficulties. Type of user, adjusted on age and gender, was linked to unrecovered health status and to impact on leisure or sport activities. When global severity (as measured by NISS) was integrated in the previous model, type of user was also associated with impact on occupation or studies. Type of user was further associated with impact on occupation or studies and on leisure or sport activities when global severity and the sociodemographic data obtained at inclusion were taken into account. It was not, however, related to any of the outcomes studied here, when the models focused on the injured body region. Finally, type of road user did not seem, on the various predictive models, to be related to financial difficulties due to the accident or to impact on familial or affective life. CONCLUSIONS Overall, victims were affected by their accident even 2 years after it occurred. The severity of lesions induced by the accident was the main predictive factor. However, considering lesion as intermediary factors between the accident and the recovery status at 2 year post-accident, impact on health status was lower for cyclists than M4W users or M2W users.


Annals of Physical and Rehabilitation Medicine | 2014

Cognitive and behavioural post-traumatic impairments: What is the specificity of a brain injury ? A study within the ESPARR cohort

Stuart Nash; J. Luauté; Jean-Yves Bar; Pierre-Olivier Sancho; Martine Hours; Laetitia Chossegros; Charlène Tournier; Pierrette Charnay; J.-M. Mazaux; Dominique Boisson

OBJECTIVE The variety and extent of impairments occurring after traumatic brain injury vary according to the nature and severity of the lesions. In order to better understand their interactions and long-term outcome, we have studied and compared the cognitive and neurobehavioral profile one year post onset of patients with and without traumatic brain injury in a cohort of motor vehicle accident victims. METHOD The study population is composed of 207 seriously injured persons from the ESPARR cohort. This cohort, which has been followed up in time, consists in 1168 motor vehicle accident victims (aged 16 years or more) with injuries with all degrees of severity. Inclusion criteria were: living in Rhone county, victim of a traffic accident having involved at least one wheel-conducted vehicle and having occurred in Rhone county, alive at the time of arrival in hospital and having presented in one of the different ER facilities of the county. The cohorts representativeness regarding social and geographic criteria and the specificities of the accidents were ensured by the specific targeting of recruitment. Deficits and impairments were assessed one year after the accident using the Neurobehavioral Rating Scale - Revised and the Trail-Making Test. Within our seriously injured group, based on the Glasgow Score, the presence of neurological deficits, aggravation of neurological condition in the first 72hours and/or abnormal cerebral imaging, we identified three categories: (i) moderate/severe traumatic brain injury (n=48), (ii) mild traumatic brain injury (n=89), and (iii) severely injured but without traumatic brain injury (n=70). RESULTS The most frequently observed symptoms were anxiety, irritability, memory and attention impairments, depressive mood and emotional lability. While depressive mood and irritability were observed with similar frequency in all three groups, memory and attention impairments, anxiety and reduced initiative were more specific to traumatic brain injury whereas executive disorders were associated with moderate/severe traumatic brain injury. DISCUSSION-CONCLUSION The presence and the initial severity of a traumatic brain injury condition the nature and frequency of residual effects after one year. Some impairments such as irritability, which is generally associated with traumatic brain injury, do not appear to be specific to this population, nor does depressive mood. Substantial interactions between cognitive, affective and neurobehavioral disorders have been highlighted.


Accident Analysis & Prevention | 2014

Health status recovery at one year in children injured in a road accident: A cohort study

Pierre Batailler; Martine Hours; Maud Maza; Pierrette Charnay; Hélène Tardy; Charlène Tournier; Etienne Javouhey

Despite the frequency of traumatic injuries due to road accidents and potential importance of identifying children at risk of impaired recovery one year after a road accident, there is a lack of data on long-term recovery of health status, except in children with severe traumatic brain injury. The aim of the present study was to evaluate predictive factors of recovery in children one year after road traffic injuries. The prospective cohort study was composed of children aged <16 years, admitted to public or private sector hospitals in the Rhône administrative area of France following a road accident. Recovery of health status one year after the accident and information concerning quality of life and the consequences of the accident for the child or family 1 year after the accident were collected by questionnaire, usually completed by the parents. Victims were in majority male (64.6%) and had mild or moderate injuries (81.9% with Maximum Abbreviated Injury Scale (M-AIS) <3). One year after the accident, 75.0% of the mild-to-moderate and 34.8% of the severe cases estimated health status as fully recovered. After adjustment, severity score (M-AIS≥3) and lower limb injury (AIS>1) were associated with incomplete recovery of health status: weighted odds ratio (ORw), 4.3 [95% confidence interval (95% CI), 1.3-14.6] and ORw, 6.5 [95% CI, 1.9-21.7], respectively. Recovery status correlated significantly with quality of life physical scores (r=0.46), especially body pain (r=0.48) and role/social-physical (r=0.50) and, to a lesser extent, quality of life psychosocial scores (r=0.21). In a cohort of children injured in a road accident, those with high injury severity score and those with lower limb injuries are less likely to recover full health status by 1 year. Impaired health status was associated with a lower physical quality of life score at 1 year.


BMC Public Health | 2015

Five years after the accident, whiplash casualties still have poorer quality of life in the physical domain than other mildly injured casualties: analysis of the ESPARR cohort.

Charlène Tournier; Martine Hours; Pierrette Charnay; Laetitia Chossegros; Hélène Tardy


VIe Congrès International d'Épidémiologie - ADELF - EPITER | 2014

Évolution de la qualité de vie après un traumatisme crânien par accident de la route

Kobto Ghislain Koura; Martine Hours; Pierrette Charnay; Charlène Tournier; Etienne Javouhey; Jacques Luauté


VIe Congrès International d'Épidémiologie - ADELF - EPITER | 2014

Cohorte ESPARR : facteurs associés à l’état de santé des victimes 3 ans après l’accident.

Charlène Tournier; Pierrette Charnay; Jacques Luauté; Martine Hours


19th European Congress of Physical and Rehabilitation Medicine | 2014

The ESPARR cohort: the future of the serious injured aged 16 years and over (MAIS3=) with a traumatic brain injury (TBI) three years after the crash.

Charlène Tournier; Pierrette Charnay; Jacques Luauté; Martine Hours


North American Brain Injury Society 11th Annual Conference on Brain Injury | 2013

Impact of traumatic brain injury on the evolution of quality of life during the first five years following a road accident

Kobto Ghislain Koura; Pierrette Charnay; Charlène Tournier; Etienne Javouhey; Jacques Luauté; Martine Hours


Congrès ADELF-SFSP. Santé Publique et Prévention | 2013

Un an après un accident de la route peu grave, existe-t-il une spécificité du coup du lapin ? Cohorte ESPARR

Charlène Tournier; Pierrette Charnay; Inès Khati; Martine Hours

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Bernard Laumon

Institut de veille sanitaire

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J.-M. Mazaux

Université Bordeaux Segalen

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