Monday, November 23, 2015

Problem-Solving Therapy During Outpatient Stroke Rehabilitation Improves Coping and Health-Related Quality of Life

So rather than finding recovery solutions for survivors we have persons researching coping skills. You wouldn't need so many fucking coping skills if you solved the goddamned problems in stroke. God I hate stupid people.
http://stroke.ahajournals.org/content/early/2015/11/19/STROKEAHA.115.010961.abstract

Randomized Controlled Trial

  1. Gerard M. Ribbers, MD, PhD
+ Author Affiliations
  1. From the Department of Rehabilitation Medicine (M.M.V., M.H.H.-K., G.M.R.) and Department of Psychiatry, Section Medical Psychology and Psychotherapy (A.v.S., J.J.V.B.), Erasmus University Medical Center, Rotterdam, The Netherlands; Rotterdam Neurorehabilitation Research Department (RoNeRes), Rijndam Rehabilitation Center, Rotterdam, The Netherlands (M.M.V., M.H.H.-K., G.M.R.); and Department of Physical and Rehabilitation Medicine, Ghent University Hospital, Ghent, Belgium (E.L.).
  1. Correspondence to Majanka H. Heijenbrok-Kal, PhD, Rotterdam Neurorehabilitation Research (RoNeRes), Rijndam Rehabilitation Center, PO Box 23181, 3001 KD, Rotterdam, The Netherlands. E-mail mheijenbrok@rijndam.nl

Abstract

Background and Purpose—This study investigated whether problem-solving therapy (PST) is an effective group intervention for improving coping strategy and health-related quality of life (HRQoL) in patients with stroke .
Methods—In this multicenter randomized controlled trial, the intervention group received PST as add-on to standard outpatient rehabilitation, the control group received outpatient rehabilitation only. Measurements were performed at baseline, directly after the intervention, and 6 and 12 months later. Data were analyzed using linear-mixed models. Primary outcomes were task-oriented coping as measured by the Coping Inventory for Stressful Situations and psychosocial HRQoL as measured by the Stroke-Specific Quality of Life Scale. Secondary outcomes were the EuroQol EQ-5D-5L utility score, emotion-oriented and avoidant coping as measured by the Coping Inventory for Stressful Situations, problem-solving skills as measured by the Social Problem Solving Inventory-Revised, and depression as measured by the Center for Epidemiological Studies Depression Scale.
Results—Included were 166 patients with stroke, mean age 53.06 years (SD, 10.19), 53% men, median time poststroke 7.29 months (interquartile range, 4.90–10.61 months). Six months post intervention, the PST group showed significant improvement when compared with the control group in task-oriented coping (P=0.008), but not stroke-specific psychosocial HRQoL. Furthermore, avoidant coping (P=0.039) and the utility value for general HRQoL (P=0.034) improved more in the PST group than in the control after 6 months.
Conclusions—PST seems to improve task-oriented coping but not disease-specific psychosocial HRQoL after stroke >6-month follow-up. Furthermore, we found indications that PST may improve generic HRQoL recovery and avoidant coping.
Clinical Trial Registration—URL: http://www.trialregister.nl/trialreg/admin/rctview.asp?TC=2509. Unique identifier: CNTR2509.

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