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Dive into the research topics where Terry Stancin is active.

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Featured researches published by Terry Stancin.


Neuropsychology (journal) | 2002

A Prospective Study of Short- and Long-Term Outcomes After Traumatic Brain Injury in Children: Behavior and Achievement

H. Gerry Taylor; Keith Owen Yeates; Shari L. Wade; Dennis Drotar; Terry Stancin; Nori Minich

Longitudinal behavior and achievement outcomes of traumatic brain injury (TBI) were investigated in 53 children with severe TBI, 56 children with moderate TBI, and 80 children with orthopedic injuries not involving brain insult. Measures of preinjury child and family status and of postinjury achievement skills were administered shortly after injury. Assessments were repeated 3 times across a mean follow-up interval of 4 years. Results from mixed model analysis revealed persisting sequelae of TBI. Recovery of math skills was observed in the severe TBI group but only for children from less stressed families. Social disadvantage in children with TBI predicted more adverse behavioral sequelae and less favorable changes in some outcome measures. The findings suggest that pediatric TBI has long-term effects on behavior and achievement but that postinjury progress is influenced by the family environment.


Journal of The International Neuropsychological Society | 2004

Short- and long-term social outcomes following pediatric traumatic brain injury.

Keith Owen Yeates; Erika Swift; H. Gerry Taylor; Shari L. Wade; Dennis Drotar; Terry Stancin; Nori Minich

The social outcomes of pediatric traumatic brain injury (TBI) were examined in a prospective, longitudinal study that included 53 children with severe TBI, 56 with moderate TBI, and 80 with orthopedic injuries, recruited between 6 and 12 years of age. Child and family functioning were assessed at baseline, at 6- and 12-month follow-ups, and at an extended follow-up a mean of 4 years post injury. Growth curve analyses revealed that pediatric TBI yields negative social outcomes that are exacerbated by family environments characterized by lower socioeconomic status, fewer family resources, and poorer family functioning. After controlling for group membership, age, race, socioeconomic status, and IQ, path analyses indicated that long-term social outcomes were accounted for in part by specific neurocognitive skills, including executive functions and pragmatic language, and by social problem-solving. Deficits in these domains among children with TBI are likely to reflect damage to a network of brain regions that have been implicated in social cognition.


Psychological Bulletin | 2007

Social Outcomes in Childhood Brain Disorder: A Heuristic Integration of Social Neuroscience and Developmental Psychology.

Keith Owen Yeates; Erin D. Bigler; Maureen Dennis; Cynthia A. Gerhardt; Kenneth H. Rubin; Terry Stancin; H. Gerry Taylor; Kathryn Vannatta

The authors propose a heuristic model of the social outcomes of childhood brain disorder that draws on models and methods from both the emerging field of social cognitive neuroscience and the study of social competence in developmental psychology/psychopathology. The heuristic model characterizes the relationships between social adjustment, peer interactions and relationships, social problem solving and communication, social-affective and cognitive-executive processes, and their neural substrates. The model is illustrated by research on a specific form of childhood brain disorder, traumatic brain injury. The heuristic model may promote research regarding the neural and cognitive-affective substrates of childrens social development. It also may engender more precise methods of measuring impairments and disabilities in children with brain disorder and suggest ways to promote their social adaptation.


Journal of The International Neuropsychological Society | 2001

Bidirectional child-family influences on outcomes of traumatic brain injury in children.

H. Gerry Taylor; Keith Owen Yeates; Shari L. Wade; Dennis Drotar; Terry Stancin; Christopher Burant

Child behavior problems, injury-related family burden, and parent psychological distress were assessed longitudinally over the first year post injury in 40 children with severe traumatic brain injury (TBI), 52 with moderate TBI, and 55 with orthopedic injuries not involving brain insult. Parents rated childrens preinjury behavior soon after injury. Postinjury child behavior and family outcomes were assessed at 6- and 12-month follow-ups. Findings from path analysis revealed both direct and indirect effects of TBI on child behavior and family outcomes, as well as cross-lagged child-family associations. Higher parent distress at 6 months predicted more child behavior problems at 12 months, controlling for earlier behavior problems; and more behavior problems at 6 months predicted poorer family outcomes at 12 months, controlling for earlier family outcomes. Support for bidirectional influences is tentative given that limited sample size precluded use of structural equation modeling. The findings nevertheless provide impetus for considering the influences of person-environment interactions on outcomes of TBI.


Neuropsychology (journal) | 1999

Influences on first-year recovery from traumatic brain injury in children.

H. G. Taylor; Keith Owen Yeates; Shari L. Wade; Dennis Drotar; Susan Klein; Terry Stancin

This study examined recovery over the first year following traumatic brain injury (TBI) in children 6-12 years of age. Forty-two children with severe TBI and 52 with moderate TBI were compared to 58 children with orthopedic injuries. The children and their families were evaluated at a baseline assessment and at 6- and 12-month follow-ups. Findings documented cognitive, achievement, and behavioral sequelae of TBI, with only limited evidence for recovery over the first year postinjury. Outcomes were predicted by preinjury factors, TBI severity, and measures of the postinjury family environment. Some of the sequelae of severe TBI were more marked in the context of higher compared with lower levels of family burden or dysfunction. The findings confirm the need to consider environmental contributions to outcomes of TBI in children.


Neuropsychology (journal) | 2002

A prospective study of short- and long-term neuropsychological outcomes after traumatic brain injury in children

Keith Owen Yeates; H. Gerry Taylor; Shari L. Wade; Dennis Drotar; Terry Stancin; Nori Minich

Longitudinal neuropsychological outcomes of traumatic brain injury (TBI) were investigated in 53 children with severe TBI, 56 children with moderate TBI, and 80 children with orthopedic injuries only. Neuropsychological functioning was assessed at baseline, at 6- and 12-month follow-ups, and at an extended follow-up (a mean of 4 years postinjury). Mixed model analyses revealed persistent neuropsychological sequelae of TBI that generally did not vary as a function of time postinjury. Some recovery occurred during the first year postinjury, but recovery reached a plateau after that time, and deficits were still apparent at the extended follow-up. Further recovery was uncommon after the first year postinjury. Family factors did not moderate neuropsychological outcomes, despite their demonstrated influence on behavior and academic achievement after childhood TBI.


Neuropsychology (journal) | 2010

The family environment as a moderator of psychosocial outcomes following traumatic brain injury in young children.

Keith Owen Yeates; H. G. Taylor; Nicolay Chertkoff Walz; Terry Stancin; Shari L. Wade

OBJECTIVE This study sought to determine whether the family environment moderates psychosocial outcomes after traumatic brain injury (TBI) in young children. METHOD Participants were recruited prospectively from consecutive hospital admissions of 3- to 6-year-old children, and included 19 with severe TBI, 56 with complicated mild/moderate TBI, and 99 with orthopedic injuries (OI). They completed 4 assessments across the first 18 months postinjury. The initial assessment included measures of parenting style, family functioning, and the quality of the home. Childrens behavioral adjustment, adaptive functioning, and social competence were assessed at each occasion. Mixed model analyses examined the relationship of the family environment to psychosocial outcomes across time. RESULTS The OI and TBI groups differed significantly in social competence, but the family environment did not moderate the group difference, which was of medium magnitude. In contrast, group differences in behavioral adjustment became more pronounced across time at high levels of authoritarian and permissive parenting; among children with severe TBI, however, even those with low levels of permissive parenting showed increases in behavioral problems. For adaptive functioning, better home environments provided some protection following TBI, but not over time for the severe TBI group. These 3-way interactions of group, family environment, and time postinjury were all of medium magnitude. CONCLUSION The findings indicate that the family environment moderates the psychosocial outcomes of TBI in young children, but the moderating influence may wane with time among children with severe TBI.


Pediatrics | 1998

Family Burden and Adaptation During the Initial Year After Traumatic Brain Injury in Children

Shari L. Wade; H. G. Taylor; Dennis Drotar; Terry Stancin; Keith Owen Yeates

Objective. Traumatic brain injury (TBI) often leads to long-term behavioral and cognitive deficits in children. However, little is known about the burden and psychosocial morbidity of pediatric TBI for families. The purpose of this study was to test the hypothesis that moderate and severe TBI in children has more adverse consequences than orthopedic trauma. Design. The sample was comprised of children between the ages of 6 and 12 recruited from hospital trauma and inpatient units including 53 with severe TBI, 56 with moderate TBI, and 80 with orthopedic injuries not involving central nervous system insult. Measures of injury-related burden, parental distress, and family functioning were administered to the childs primary caregiver at baseline assessment conducted soon after injury and at 6- and 12-month follow-ups. Multivariate repeated measures analysis of covariance was used to examine group differences in these outcomes over time. Results. Caregivers in the severe TBI group reported significantly higher levels of family burden, injury-related stress, and parental psychological symptoms than caregivers in the orthopedic injury group (ORTHO). The groups did not differ with respect to marital distress. Caregivers in the severe TBI group were significantly more likely than caregivers in the ORTHO group to exceed the clinical cutoff on the Brief Symptom Inventory and to report clinically significant levels of family dysfunction at follow-up. Conclusions. The findings suggest that severe TBI is a source of considerable caregiver morbidity, even when compared with other traumatic injuries. Caregivers in the severe TBI group had persistent stress associated with the childs injury, as well as the reactions of other family members, and a relative risk of clinically significant psychological symptoms nearly twice that of the ORTHO comparison group. These findings underscore the need for interventions that facilitate family adaptation after pediatric TBI.


Journal of Head Trauma Rehabilitation | 2002

A prospective study of long-term caregiver and family adaptation following brain injury in children.

Shari L. Wade; H. Gerry Taylor; Dennis Drotar; Terry Stancin; Keith Owen Yeates; Nori Minich

Objective:We examined long-term differences in family adaptation following traumatic brain injuries (TBI) and orthopedic injuries. Design:Families of children with severe TBI (n = 53), moderate TBI (n = 56), and orthopedic injuries (n = 80) were assessed at baseline, 6 months, and 12 months post injury and at an extended follow-up an average of 4.1 years post injury. Caregiver and family outcomes were examined using mixed model analysis. Results:Patterns of adaptation over time varied across groups but indicated long-standing injury-related stress and burden in the severe TBI group. Conclusions:Severe TBI results in persistent caregiver stress for a substantial proportion of families.


Neuropsychology (journal) | 2009

Predicting Longitudinal Patterns of Functional Deficits in Children With Traumatic Brain Injury

Taryn B. Fay; Keith Owen Yeates; Shari L. Wade; Dennis Drotar; Terry Stancin; H. Gerry Taylor

Longitudinal patterns of functional deficits were investigated in 37 children with severe traumatic brain injury (TBI), 40 children with moderate TBI, and 44 children with orthopedic injuries. They were from 6 to 12 years of age when injured. Their neuropsychological, behavioral, adaptive, and academic functioning were assessed at 6 months, 12 months, and 3-5 years postinjury. Functional deficits (<10th percentile for age) were identified within each outcome domain at each occasion. Children were classified into 4 a priori longitudinal patterns of outcomes within domains (i.e., no deficits, improvement, deterioration, persistent deficits). In multinomial logistic regression analyses, severe TBI predicted an increased likelihood of persistent deficits in all outcome domains, as well as deterioration in behavioral functioning and improvement in neuropsychological, adaptive, and academic functioning. Severe TBI also predicted a greater total number of functional deficits across domains at each occasion. However, many children with severe TBI showed no deficits from 6 months to 4 years postinjury in 1 or more outcome domains. The findings help clarify the course of recovery for individual children following TBI.

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Shari L. Wade

Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center

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H. Gerry Taylor

Case Western Reserve University

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Keith Owen Yeates

Alberta Children's Hospital

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Dennis Drotar

Case Western Reserve University

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Michael W. Kirkwood

University of Colorado Denver

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Nicolay Chertkoff Walz

Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center

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Cynthia A. Gerhardt

Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center

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Erin D. Bigler

Brigham Young University

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Kathryn Vannatta

The Research Institute at Nationwide Children's Hospital

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