Nancy E Mayo1, Susan Scott. 1. Division of Clinical Epidemiology, McGill University Hospital Center, Montreal, Quebec, Canada. nancy.mayo@mcgill.ca
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: to estimate the extent to which a case-management intervention for persons newly discharged into the community following an acute stroke effected a change in stroke outcome in comparison with usual care. DESIGN: a re-analysis of stratified, balanced, randomised clinical trial. SETTING: five university-affiliated acute-care hospitals in Montreal, Quebec, Canada. PARTICIPANTS: a total of 190 persons (mean age 70 years) returning home directly from the acute-care hospital following a first or recurrent stroke with a need for health-care supervision post-discharge because of low function, co-morbidity or isolation. INTERVENTION: for 6 weeks following discharge a nurse case manager delivered, depending on need, over 50 different nursing interventions (range 2-15 per person), which targeted physical, emotional and psychological impairments, role participation restrictions and health perception. MEASUREMENTS: seven of the SF-36 subscales were used to measure the targeted constructs, at the post-intervention and 6 month evaluations. Seven binary response variables were created with a change of 10 points the criterion for individual response. Generalised estimating equations, equivalent to a logistic regression for multiple outcomes, were used. RESULTS: the odds of responding to one or more outcomes was 41% greater in the intervention group than in the control group [odds ratio (OR): 1.41; 95% confidence interval (CI): 1.11-1.79]. CONCLUSION: an analysis considering the complexity of the intervention and outcomes targeted indicated effectiveness of the nurse case-management post-stroke, whereas the traditional one outcome analysis did not.
RCT Entities:
OBJECTIVES: to estimate the extent to which a case-management intervention for persons newly discharged into the community following an acute stroke effected a change in stroke outcome in comparison with usual care. DESIGN: a re-analysis of stratified, balanced, randomised clinical trial. SETTING: five university-affiliated acute-care hospitals in Montreal, Quebec, Canada. PARTICIPANTS: a total of 190 persons (mean age 70 years) returning home directly from the acute-care hospital following a first or recurrent stroke with a need for health-care supervision post-discharge because of low function, co-morbidity or isolation. INTERVENTION: for 6 weeks following discharge a nurse case manager delivered, depending on need, over 50 different nursing interventions (range 2-15 per person), which targeted physical, emotional and psychological impairments, role participation restrictions and health perception. MEASUREMENTS: seven of the SF-36 subscales were used to measure the targeted constructs, at the post-intervention and 6 month evaluations. Seven binary response variables were created with a change of 10 points the criterion for individual response. Generalised estimating equations, equivalent to a logistic regression for multiple outcomes, were used. RESULTS: the odds of responding to one or more outcomes was 41% greater in the intervention group than in the control group [odds ratio (OR): 1.41; 95% confidence interval (CI): 1.11-1.79]. CONCLUSION: an analysis considering the complexity of the intervention and outcomes targeted indicated effectiveness of the nurse case-management post-stroke, whereas the traditional one outcome analysis did not.
Authors: Bruce H K Dobkin; Stephen E Nadeau; Andrea L Behrman; Samuel S Wu; Dorian K Rose; Mark Bowden; Stephanie Studenski; Xiaomin Lu; Pamela W Duncan Journal: J Rehabil Res Dev Date: 2014
Authors: Nancy E Mayo; Mark Bayley; Pierre Duquette; Yves Lapierre; Ross Anderson; Susan Bartlett Journal: BMC Neurol Date: 2013-06-28 Impact factor: 2.474
Authors: Annemarie P M Stiekema; Christine Resch; Mireille Donkervoort; Natska Jansen; Kitty H M Jurrius; Judith M Zadoks; Caroline M van Heugten Journal: Trials Date: 2020-11-17 Impact factor: 2.279