Saturday, June 13, 2020

Exploring post acute rehabilitation service use and outcomes for working age stroke survivors (≤65 years) in Australia, UK and South East Asia: data from the international AVERT trial

What followup is going to occur for the massive failures in recovery seen in this trial? Since we have NO LEADERSHIP AND NO STRATEGY, absolutely nothing will occur. The takeaway is don't have a stroke while young, or actually any time. In the business world failures are addressed and fixed, obviously the stroke medical world has no business sense at all. 

Exploring post acute rehabilitation service use and outcomes for working age stroke survivors (≤65 years) in Australia, UK and South East Asia: data from the international AVERT trial

  1. Rosy Walters1,2,
  2. Janice M Collier2,
  3. Lillian Braighi Carvalho2,
  4. Peter Langhorne3,
  5. Md Ali Katijjahbe4,5,
  6. Dawn Tan6,
  7. Marj Moodie7,
  8. Julie Bernhardt2
  9. AVERT Trialists’ Collaboration

Author affiliations


Abstract

Objectives Information about younger people of working age (≤65 years), their post stroke outcomes and rehabilitation pathways can highlight areas for further research and service change. This paper describes: (1) baseline demographics; (2) post acute rehabilitation pathways; and (3) 12-month outcomes; disability, mobility, depression, quality of life, informal care and return to work of working age people across three geographic regions (Australasia (AUS), South East (SE) Asia and UK).
Design This post hoc descriptive exploration of data from the large international very early rehabilitation trial (A Very Early Rehabilitation Trial (AVERT)) examined the four common post acute rehabilitation pathways (inpatient rehabilitation, home with community rehabilitation, inpatient rehabilitation then community rehabilitation and home with no rehabilitation) experienced by participants in the 3 months post stroke and describes their 12-month outcomes.
Setting Hospital stroke units in AUS, UK and SE Asia.
Participants Patients who had an acute stroke recruited within 24 hours who were ≤65 years.
Results 668 participants were ≤65 years; 99% lived independently, and 88% no disability (modified Rankin Score (mRS)=0) prior to stroke. We had complete data for 12-month outcomes for n=631 (94%). The proportion receiving inpatient rehabilitation was higher in AUS than other regions (AUS 52%; UK 25%; SE Asia 23%), whereas the UK had higher community rehabilitation (UK 65%; AUS 61%; SE Asia 39%). At 12 months, 70% had no or little disability (mRS 0–2), 44% were depressed, 28% rated quality of life as poor or worse than death. For those working prior to stroke (n=228), only 57% had returned to work. A noteworthy number of working age survivors received no rehabilitation services within 3 months post stroke.
Conclusions There was considerable variation in rehabilitation pathways and post acute service use across the three regions. At 12 months, there were high rates of depression, poor quality of life and low rates of return to work.
Trial registration number Australian New Zealand Clinical Trials Registry (ACTRN12606000185561).
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
This is an open access article distributed in accordance with the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 Unported (CC BY 4.0) license, which permits others to copy, redistribute, remix, transform and build upon this work for any purpose, provided the original work is properly cited, a link to the licence is given, and indication of whether changes were made. See: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/.
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