They have this point of stroke rehab being to optimise function instead of 100% recovery. Totally wrong point of stroke rehab. That tyranny of low expectations needs to stop.
The effect of rehabilitation interventions on physical function and immobility-related complications in severe stroke—protocol for a systematic review
- Mark P. McGlincheyEmail authorView ORCID ID profile,
- Jimmy James,
- Christopher McKevitt,
- Abdel Douiri,
- Sarah McLachlan and
- Catherine M. Sackley
- Received: 5 May 2018
- Accepted: 2 November 2018
- Published: 17 November 2018
Abstract
Background
Stroke rehabilitation aims to
optimise function and reduce complications post-stroke. Rehabilitation
to optimise physical function post-stroke has beneficial effects for
survivors of mild to moderate stroke. However, little is known about the
effectiveness of interventions to rehabilitate physical function or
manage immobility-related complications for survivors of severe stroke.
The systematic review aims to evaluate the effectiveness of
rehabilitation interventions on physical function and immobility-related
complications in severe stroke and identify topics for future research
in this area.
Methods
A systematic review of
relevant electronic databases (MEDLINE, Embase, CINAHL, AMED, PEDro,
DORIS and CENTRAL) between January 1987 and July 2017 will be undertaken
to identify eligible published randomised controlled trials (RCTs) in
any language. Ongoing RCTs will be identified by searching health-care
trial registers (Stroke Trials Registry, ClinicalTrials.gov). Hand
searches of identified study reference lists will also be performed. The
PRISMA statement will be used to guide the systematic review. Two
reviewers will screen search results, select studies using pre-defined
selection criteria, extract data from and assess risk of bias for
selected studies. Studies comparing the effect of one type of
rehabilitation intervention to another or usual care on physical
function and immobility-related complications for patients with severe
stroke will be included. Studies may include participants with all
levels of stroke severity but must provide sub-group analysis based on
stroke severity. Studies will focus on any phase of the stroke
rehabilitation pathway and will be grouped and analysed according to
their timeframe post-stroke into acute and early sub-acute (up to
3 months post-stroke), early sub-acute to late sub-acute (from 3 to
6 months post-stroke) and chronic (greater than 6 months post-stroke).
If sufficient studies demonstrate homogeneity, a meta-analysis will pool
results of individual outcomes. The GRADE approach will be used to
assess the evidence strength.
Discussion
The results of this systematic
review will summarise the strength of evidence for rehabilitation
interventions used in the rehabilitation of physical function and
immobility-related complications in severe stroke and identify gaps in
evidence.
Systematic review registration
The systematic review was
registered with the International Prospective Register of Systematic
Reviews (PROSPERO)—registration number CRD77737.
No comments:
Post a Comment