Do you not understand that the solution to depression is 100% recovery protocols? Your patients will be too busy counting reps and looking forward to recovery to get depressed. If you can't see that and aren't working towards that. GET THE HELL OUT OF STROKE!
Depressive symptoms moderate the relationship among physical capacity, balance self-efficacy, and participation in people after stroke
Physical Therapy , Volume 101(12)
NARIC Accession Number: J89003. What's this?
ISSN: 0031-9023.
Author(s): French, Margaret A.; Miller, Allison; Pohlig, Ryan T.; Reisman, Darcy S..
Publication Year: 2021.
Number of Pages: 10.
NARIC Accession Number: J89003. What's this?
ISSN: 0031-9023.
Author(s): French, Margaret A.; Miller, Allison; Pohlig, Ryan T.; Reisman, Darcy S..
Publication Year: 2021.
Number of Pages: 10.
Abstract:
Study examined the effect of symptoms of depression on the mediated
relationship between physical capacity and participation by balance
self-efficacy in individuals after stroke. Two hundred eighty-two people
with chronic stroke (>6 months) were classified as having either low
or high Geriatric Depression Scale scores. A multiple-group structural
equation model was used to test moderated mediation by comparing a
constrained model (indicating no effect of depression on the mediation)
and an unconstrained model (indicating an effect of depression on the
mediation). The models were compared using a chi-squared difference
test. The chi-squared difference test suggested that the unconstrained
model was a better fit, indicating that depressive symptoms moderated
the mediated relationship between physical capacity and participation.
In the low-depression group, a significant indirect effect indicated
that balance self-efficacy did mediate the relationship between physical
capacity and participation. There was no significant indirect effect in
the high-depression group. The results suggest the relationship between
physical capacity and participation appears to be mediated by balance
self-efficacy in stroke survivors with low reports of depressive
symptoms, but in those with high reports of depressive symptoms,
physical capacity and balance self-efficacy are unrelated to
participation. Therefore, targeting balance self-efficacy to improve
post-stroke participation may be beneficial only for individuals with
low reports of depression. In individuals after stroke with high reports
of depression, treatment should include and emphasize the treatment of
those depressive symptoms.
Descriptor Terms: COMMUNITY LIVING, DEPRESSION, EQUILIBRIUM, PHYSICAL FITNESS, PHYSICAL THERAPY, POSTURE, SELF CONCEPT, STROKE.
Can this document be ordered through NARIC's document delivery service*?: Y.
Citation: French, Margaret A., Miller, Allison, Pohlig, Ryan T., Reisman, Darcy S.. (2021). Depressive symptoms moderate the relationship among physical capacity, balance self-efficacy, and participation in people after stroke. Physical Therapy , 101(12) Retrieved 6/23/2022, from REHABDATA database.
Descriptor Terms: COMMUNITY LIVING, DEPRESSION, EQUILIBRIUM, PHYSICAL FITNESS, PHYSICAL THERAPY, POSTURE, SELF CONCEPT, STROKE.
Can this document be ordered through NARIC's document delivery service*?: Y.
Citation: French, Margaret A., Miller, Allison, Pohlig, Ryan T., Reisman, Darcy S.. (2021). Depressive symptoms moderate the relationship among physical capacity, balance self-efficacy, and participation in people after stroke. Physical Therapy , 101(12) Retrieved 6/23/2022, from REHABDATA database.
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