Where is the companion piece?
The Importance of Doctor Involvement in Stroke Rehabilitation.
We already know that survivors have to drive their own recovery as Dr. Steven Wolf writes, a rehabilitation stroke expert and
professor at Emory University School of Medicine in Atlanta. "Stroke patients need to rely more on their own problem solving to regain mobility".
You are completely on your own, deal with it.
- Published: June 10, 2016
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0157149
Abstract
Objective
To
investigate the perceived needs for health services by persons with
stroke within the first year after rehabilitation, and associations
between perceived impact of stroke, involvement in decisions regarding
care/treatment, and having health services needs met.
Method
Data
was collected, through a mail survey, from patients with stroke who
were admitted to a university hospital in 2012 and had received
rehabilitation after discharge from the stroke unit. The rehabilitation
lasted an average of 2 to 4.6 months. The Stroke Survivor Needs Survey
Questionnaire was used to assess the participants' perceptions of
involvement in decisions on care or treatment and needs for health
services in 11 problem areas: mobility, falls, incontinence, pain,
fatigue, emotion, concentration, memory, speaking, reading, and sight.
The perceived impact of stroke in eight areas was assessed using the
Stroke Impact Scale (SIS) 3.0. Eleven logistic regression models were
created to explore associations between having health services needs met
in each problem area respectively (dependent variable) and the
independent variables. In all models the independent variables were:
age, sex, SIS domain corresponding to the dependent variable, or stroke
severity in cases when no corresponding SIS domain was identified, and
involvement in decisions on care and treatment.
Results
The
63 participants who returned the questionnaires had a mean age of 72
years, 33 were male and 30 were female. Eighty percent had suffered a
mild stroke. The number of participants who reported problems varied
between 51 (80%, mobility) and 24 (38%, sight). Involvement in decisions
on care and treatment was found to be associated with having health
services needs met in six problem areas: falls, fatigue, emotion,
memory, speaking, and reading.
Conclusions
The
results highlight the importance of involving patients in making
decisions on stroke rehabilitation, as it appears to be associated with
meeting their health services needs.
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