| Literature DB >> 21966599 |
Abstract
The aim of this paper was to examine the amount and type of physical activity engaged in by people hospitalised after stroke. Method. We systematically reviewed the literature for observational studies describing the physical activity of stroke patients. Results. Behavioural mapping, video recording and therapist report are used to monitor activity levels in hospitalised stroke patients in the 24 included studies. Most of the patient day is spent inactive (median 48.1%, IQR 39.6%-69.3%), alone (median 53.7%, IQR 44.2%-60.6%) and in their bedroom (median 56.5%, IQR 45.2%-72.5%). Approximately one hour per day is spent in physiotherapy (median 63.2 minutes, IQR 36.0-79.5) and occupational therapy (median 57.0 minutes, IQR 25.1-58.5). Even in formal therapy sessions limited time is spent in moderate to high level physical activity. Low levels of physical activity appear more common in patients within 14 days post-stroke and those admitted to conventional care. Conclusions. Physical activity levels are low in hospitalised stroke patients. Improving the description and classification of post stroke physical activity would enhance our ability to pool data across observational studies. The importance of increasing activity levels and the effectiveness of interventions to increase physical activity after stroke need to be tested further.Entities:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21966599 PMCID: PMC3182066 DOI: 10.1155/2012/813765
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Stroke Res Treat
General patient activity studies.
| Study | Patients | Organisation of care categories | Behavioural mapping procedure for individual patients |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bear-Lehman et al. [ | Rehabilitation inpatients | SU | 8 am–4 pm, every 30 mins, for 1 weekday and 1 weekend day |
| Bernhardt et al. [ | Acute (<14 d) inpatients | SU (<14 d) | 8 am–5 pm, every 10 mins, for 2 consecutive weekdays |
| Bernhardt et al. [ | Acute (<14 d) inpatients | SU (<14 d) | 8 am–5 pm, every 10 mins, for 1 weekday |
| De Weerdt et al. [ | Rehabilitation inpatients | SU | 8.30 am–5.10 pm, every 10 mins, for 1 weekday |
| De Weerdt et al. [ | Rehabilitation inpatients | SU | 8.30 am–5.10 pm, every 10 mins, for 2 weekdays in 1st observation period, 1 weekday in 2nd period |
| De Wit et al. [ | Rehabilitation inpatients | SU | 7 am–12 pm or 12 pm–5 pm or 5 pm–10 pm, every 10 mins, for 1 weekday |
| Esmonde et al. [ | Rehabilitation inpatients | SU | 9 am–5 pm, average every 10.8 mins, for 4–9 weekdays |
| Keith [ | Rehabilitation inpatients | SU | 8.15 am–16.15 am every 30 mins, for 5 consecutive weekdays |
| Keith and Cowell [ | Rehabilitation inpatients | SU, GRU | 8.30 am–4.30 pm, every 8 mins, for 2 weekdays |
| Lincoln et al. [ | Rehabilitation inpatients | SU | 8.30 am–4.30 pm, average every 30 mins, for 3 consecutive days |
| Lincoln et al. [ | Rehabilitation Inpatients | SU, CCU | 6 am–2 pm or 8.30 am–4.30pm or 2 pm–10 pm, |
| Mackey et al. [ | Rehabilitation inpatients | GRU | 7 am–7 pm, every 10 mins, for 3-4 weekdays and both weekend days |
| Pound et al. [ | Inpatients | SU, CCU | 7.30 am–3.30 pm or 9.30 am–5.30 pm or 2.30 pm–10.30 pm, |
|
Tinson [ | Inpatients | CCU | 9 am–1 pm or 1 pm–5 pm, every 30 mins, for 4 weekdays, plus 9 am–5 pm, every 30 mins, for 1 weekend day |
| Wellwood et al. [ | Acute (<14 d) inpatients | SU, CCU (<14 d) | 8 am–5 pm, every 10 mins, for 1 weekday |
aData for stroke patients only, excludes weekend data; bdata for Trondheim patients only; cdata for Switzerland patients only; dexcludes 5 pm–10 pm data; eexcludes weekend data; GRU: general rehabilitation unit (includes mixed rehabilitation units); SU: stroke unit (includes acute stroke units, comprehensive stroke units and stroke rehabilitation units); CCU: conventional care unit (includes general medical wards, elderly care units and general neurology wards); <14 d—all patients observed within 14 days of stroke.
Included studies showing number of included patients and reason for grouping.
| Study | Patient group | |
|---|---|---|
| Bear-Lehman et al. [ | Stroke patients | 7 |
| Bernhardt et al. [ | Full sample | 58 |
| Bernhardt et al. [ | Trondheim unit | 37 |
| De Weerdt et al. [ | Swiss unit | 8 |
| De Weerdt et al. [ | 1st observation period | 22 |
| De Weerdt et al. [ | 2nd observation period | 16 |
| De Wit et al. [ | Belgium unit | 40 |
| De Wit et al. [ | United Kingdom unit | 40 |
| De Wit et al. [ | Switzerland unit | 40 |
| De Wit et al. [ | German unit | 40 |
| Esmonde et al. [ | Full Sample | 17 |
| Keith [ | 1st observation period | 24 |
| Keith [ | 2nd observation period | 23 |
| Keith & Cowell [ | Unit A | 22 |
| Keith & Cowell [ | Unit B | 21 |
| Keith & Cowell [ | Unit C | 20 |
| Lincoln et al. [ | 1st observation period | 15 |
| Lincoln et al. [ | 2nd observation period | 15 |
| Lincoln et al. [ | Stroke unit | 39 |
| Lincoln et al. [ | Conventional Care Unit | 37 |
| Mackey et al. [ | Unit A | 8 |
| Mackey et al. [ | Unit B | 8 |
| Pound et al. [ | Stroke Unit | 12 |
| Pound et al. [ | Elderly Care Unit | 12 |
| Pound et al. [ | General Medical Ward | 12 |
|
Tinson [ | Full sample | 15 |
| Wellwood et al. [ | United Kingdom unit | 8 |
| Wellwood et al. [ | France unit | 8 |
| Wellwood et al. [ | Lithuania unit | 8 |
| Wellwood et al. [ | Russia unit | 7 |
1, 2denote different time periods of observation; A, B, C, Ddenote different locations.
Figure 1Physical activity across the day. 1 and 2 denote different time periods of observation; A, B, C, and D denote different hospital locations.
Figure 2Proportion of time spent alone. 1 and 2 denote different time periods of observation; A, B, C, and D denote different hospital locations.
Figure 3Patient location. 1 and 2 denote different time periods of observation; A, B, C, and D denote different hospital locations; *bedside time includes time in lounge and dining areas.
Figure 4Patient activity, people present, and location according to organisation of care and time after stroke. median and IQR.
Therapy-specific activity studies.
| Study | Method | Procedure | Therapy | Patient type | Organisation of care | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ada et al. [ | Behavioural mapping | Every 10 mins for all sessions across 3-4 weekdays | PT and OT | Rehabilitation inpatients | GRU | 16 |
| Bernhardt et al. [ | Behavioural mapping and therapist report | Mapping every 10 mins plus therapist report, for all sessions across 2 weekdays | PT and OT | Acute inpatients | SU | 58 |
| Bernhardt et al. [ | Behavioural mapping and therapist report | Mapping every 10 mins plus therapist report, for all sessions over 1 weekday | PT | Acute inpatients | SU | 37 |
| Bode et al. [ | Therapist report | All therapy sessions across admission recorded, but data only reported for 2nd week | PT and OT | Rehabilitation inpatients | GRU | 101 |
| De Wit et al. [ | Video recording | Single OT and single PT session | PT and OT | Rehabilitation inpatients | SU | 60 |
| Elson et al. [ | Video recording | Single individual session and single group session | PT | Rehabilitation inpatients | GRU | 15 |
| Jette et al. [ | Therapist report | All therapy sessions across admission | PT | Rehabilitation inpatients | GRU | 972 |
| Kuys et al. [ | Video recording and heart rate monitoring | Single session | PT | Rehabilitation inpatients and outpatients | GRU | 30 |
| Latham et al. [ | Therapist report | All therapy sessions across admission | OT | Rehabilitation inpatient | GRU | 954 |
| McNaughton et al. [ | Therapist report | All therapy sessions across admission | PT and OT | Rehabilitation inpatient | GRU | 130 |
aData for Trondheim patients only; bdata for less impaired patients only, during second week of inpatient rehabilitation admission; cdata for New Zealand patients only; GRU: general rehabilitation unit (includes mixed rehabilitation units); SU: stroke unit (includes acute stroke units, comprehensive stroke units and stroke rehabilitation units); OT: occupational therapy; PT: physiotherapy.
Therapy activity patient groups and therapy intensity.
| Study | Therapy | Patient group | Setting | Minutes per session | Minutes per day | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ada et al. [ | PT and OT | Full sample | Rehabilitation | 16 | 64.0 | |
| Bernhardt et al. [ | PT | Full sample | Acute | 58 | 24.5 | 18.1 |
| Bernhardt et al. [ | OT | Full sample | Acute | 58 | 22.8 | 10.7 |
| Bernhardt et al. [ | PT | Trondheim | Rehabilitation | 37 | 27.6 | 57.4 |
| Bode et al. [ | PT | 2 week admission | Rehabilitation | 34 | 69.0 | |
| Bode et al. [ | 3 week admission | Rehabilitation | 27 | 93.0 | ||
| Bode et al. [ | 4 week admission | Rehabilitation | 19 | 93.0 | ||
| Bode et al. [ | 5 week admission | Rehabilitation | 11 | 75.0 | ||
| Bode et al. [ | OT | 2 week admission | Rehabilitation | 34 | 57.0 | |
| Bode et al. [ | 3 week admission | Rehabilitation | 27 | 57.0 | ||
| Bode et al. [ | 4 week admission | Rehabilitation | 19 | 69.0 | ||
| Bode et al. [ | 5 week admission | Rehabilitation | 11 | 60.0 | ||
| De Wit et al. [ | PT | Belgium | Rehabilitation | 15 | 46.0 | |
| De Wit et al. [ | United Kingdom | Rehabilitation | 15 | 43.0 | ||
| De Wit et al. [ | Switzerland | Rehabilitation | 15 | 44.8 | ||
| De Wit et al. [ | Germany | Rehabilitation | 15 | 33.0 | ||
| De Wit et al. [ | OT | Belgium | Rehabilitation | 15 | 36.4 | |
| De Wit et al. [ | United Kingdom | Rehabilitation | 15 | 35.2 | ||
| De Wit et al. [ | Switzerland | Rehabilitation | 15 | 40.4 | ||
| De Wit et al. [ | Germany | Rehabilitation | 15 | 28.0 | ||
| Elson et al. [ | PT | Individual therapy | Rehabilitation | 15 | 30.9 | |
| Elson et al. [ | Group therapy | Rehabilitation | 15 | 52.7 | ||
| Jette et al. [ | PT | Full sample | Rehabilitation | 972 | 51.6 | |
| Kuys et al. [ | PT | Full sample | Rehabilitation | 30 | 39.4 | 39.4 |
| Latham et al. [ | OT | Full sample | Rehabilitation | 954 | 38.1 | 41.9 |
| McNaughton et al. [ | PT | New Zealand | Rehabilitation | 130 | 15.3 | |
| McNaughton et al. [ | OT | New Zealand | Rehabilitation | 130 | 6.9 |
OT: occupational therapy, PT: physiotherapy.
Figure 5Therapy activity. *Data pooled across sites by authors of original study.
Figure 6Upper limb therapy. *Affected upper limb use across physiotherapy, occupational therapy, and speech therapy time.