Abstract
Although there have been past literature reviews which have addressed the psychological adjustment, consequences, and impact/reaction to spinal cord injury, as well as reviews of depression after spinal cord injury, there appears to be an absence of reviews which have focused primarily on the relationship between spinal cord injury and anxiety. The purpose of this paper is to present a comprehensive review of the relatively recent (the past 23–31 years depending on the database utilized) scientific literature as it pertains to anxiety reactions in spinal cord injured individuals. Specifically, this paper provides reviews of the prevalence/presence of anxiety reactions, as well as the correlates of anxiety, in the spinal cord injured population. Furthermore, this paper reviews the relatively few articles which have addressed the treatment of such symptomatology in spinal cord injured individuals. Methodological concerns and limitations of the existing literature and directions for future research are also provided.
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