Damn it all , still no protocol listed so other survivors and therapists could reuse it. If you can walk for six minutes you are already at a high functioning level. This research told me nothing new.
http://www.clarkson.edu/news/2017/news-release_2017-02-20-1.html
Stroke is the leading cause of disability in older adults in the
United States, but research by Clarkson University Associate Professor
of Physical Therapy George Fulk and his colleagues is pointing the way
to recovery for people who are relearning how to walk.
Using
data collected over a number of years from two other large clinical
trials, the Potsdam, N.Y. researcher and his team were able to create
and analyze one large database. Their results show a six-minute walk
test is the strongest predictor of walking activity in the home and
community for stroke survivors. That information, in turn, helps map the
most effective steps for physical rehabilitation and independence.
“One of my main focuses in research and my passion in physical
therapy is to better understand how physical therapy interventions help
people with stroke to relearn to walk again, so we need to better
understand how to measure walking activity," says Fulk. "We can't follow
patients around all day, so we measure how they walk in the clinic to
try to understand out how they will function in the community and at
home. A lot of times clinic and at-home experiences don't match,
though."
For example, some people perform better in a clinic because it's a
closed safe environment with not as many obstacles to walking.
Sometimes, patients could be afraid of falling or they may not have the
social support to get out, he notes. Then again, some people may not
seem to be as likely to succeed but they just do it.
Step activity monitors turned out to be the answer to the puzzle of
how much and how well stroke survivors were walking. Among the factors
they measured, researchers found that walking endurance with the
six-minute walk test was the strongest individual predictor of community
walking activity.
The study matches Fulk's belief that a person's walking endurance,
motor function, and balance are essential for walking activity after a
stroke, so rehabilitation interventions should focus on these areas to
improve a stroke survivor’s ability to walk once they leave the hospital
or clinic.
“The more we can learn, the more we can help them have a better recovery,” Fulk says.
He and his Clarkson University colleague, Assistant Professor of
Mathematics Ying He, and Assistant Professor of Rehabilitation Sciences
Pierce Boyne and Associate Professor of Rehabilitation Sciences Kari
Dunning, both of the University of Cincinnati, published their results
online in the journal Stroke on Jan. 5.
Clarkson University educates the leaders of the global economy. One
in five alumni already leads as an owner, CEO, VP or equivalent senior
executive of a company. With its main campus located in Potsdam, New
York, and additional graduate program and research facilities in the
Capital Region and Beacon, N.Y., Clarkson is a nationally recognized
research university with signature areas of academic excellence and
research directed toward the world's pressing issues. Through more than
50 rigorous programs of study in engineering, business, arts, education,
sciences and the health professions, the entire learning-living
community spans boundaries across disciplines, nations and cultures to
build powers of observation, challenge the status quo and connect
discovery and innovation with enterprise.
Photo caption: Above, Clarkson University doctor of physical
therapy students work with patients with stroke. Research by Associate
Professor of Physical Therapy George Fulk and his colleagues is pointing
the way to recovery for people who are relearning how to walk.
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