Monday, October 23, 2017

Occupational Therapy for Adults With Problems in Activities of Daily Living After Stroke

So no findings of occupational therapy being clinically proven to be helpful in stroke recovery?  Unless I'm reading this totally wrong.
http://stroke.ahajournals.org/content/48/11/e321?etoc=
Lynn A. Legg, Sharon R. Lewis, Oliver J. Schofield-Robinson, Avril Drummond, Peter Langhorne

All people carry out a daily set of home-based activities to maintain physical and mental health and to prepare body and mind for the next day’s demands. These activities are referred to as activities of daily living (ADL). The goal of occupational therapy is to improve ability to self-care after stroke. Interventions used by occupational therapists include assessment, treatment, adaptive techniques, assistive technology, and environmental adaptations.

Objectives

To assess the effects of occupational therapy interventions compared with no intervention or standard care/practice, on the ability of adults with stroke to self-care.

Search Methods

For this update, we searched the Cochrane Stroke Group Trials Register (last searched January 30, 2017), the Cochrane Controlled Trials Register (The Cochrane Library, January 2017), MEDLINE (1946 to January 5, 2017), Embase (1974 to January 5, 2017), CINAHL (1937 to January 2017), PsycINFO (1806 to November 2, 2016), AMED (1985 to November 1, 2016), and Web of Science (1900 to January 6, 2017). We also searched grey literature and clinical trials registers.

Selection Criteria

We identified randomized controlled trials of an occupational therapy intervention (compared with no intervention or standard care/practice) where ADL was the therapeutic medium or the goal.

Data Collection and Analysis

Two review authors independently performed study selection, data collection, and risk of bias assessments. We also evaluated the quality of evidence using the GRADE approach. The primary outcomes were the proportion of participants who had deteriorated or were dependent in ADL and performance in ADL at the end of follow-up.

Main Results

In this update, we included 9 studies with 994 participants, comparing ADL-focused occupational therapy with no intervention or standard care/practice. We found low quality evidence (based on unclear risk of selection bias and an unavoidable high risk of performance and detection bias) that occupational therapy interventions increased ADL performance scores (standardized mean difference, 0.17; 95% confidence interval, 0.03–0.31; P=0.02; Figure), reduced the risk of poor outcome (death, deterioration, or dependency in ADL; odds ratio, 0.71; 95% confidence interval, 0.52–0.96; P=0.03), and increased extended ADL scores (odds ratio, 0.22; 95% confidence interval, 0.07–0.37) P=0.005). Occupational therapy did not influence mortality or reduce the combined odds of death and institutionalization or death and dependency. Occupational therapy did not improve mood or distress scores. There were insufficient data to determine the effects of occupational therapy on health-related quality of life. There were insufficient data to determine carer-related outcomes or participants’ and carers’ satisfaction with services.
Figure.

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