| Literature DB >> 26542936 |
Sara E McEwen1,2, Michelle Donald3, Deirdre Dawson4,5, Mary Y Egan6, Anne Hunt7, Sylvia Quant4,3, Sharron Runions3, Elizabeth Linkewich4,3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Patients with cognitive impairments following a stroke are often denied access to inpatient rehabilitation. The few patients with cognitive impairment admitted to rehabilitation generally receive services based on outdated impairment-reduction models, rather than recommended function-based approaches. Both reduced access to rehabilitation and the knowledge-to-practice gap stem from a reported lack of skills and knowledge regarding cognitive rehabilitation on the part of inpatient rehabilitation team members. To address these issues, a multi-faceted knowledge translation (KT) initiative will be implemented and evaluated. It will be targeted specifically at the inter-professional application of the cognitive orientation to daily occupational performance (CO-OP). CO-OP training combined with KT support is called CO-OP KT. The long-term objective of CO-OP KT is to optimize functional outcomes for individuals with stroke and cognitive impairments. Three research questions are posed: 1. Is the implementation of CO-OP KT associated with a change in the proportion of patients with cognitive impairment following a stroke accepted to inpatient rehabilitation? 2. Is the implementation of CO-OP KT associated with a change in rehabilitation clinicians' practice, knowledge, and self-efficacy related to implementing the CO-OP approach, immediately following and 1 year later? 3. Is CO-OP KT associated with changes in activity, participation, and self-efficacy to perform daily activities in patients with cognitive impairment following stroke at discharge from inpatient rehabilitation and at 1-, 3-, and 6-month follow-ups? METHODS/Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26542936 PMCID: PMC4635536 DOI: 10.1186/s13012-015-0346-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Implement Sci ISSN: 1748-5908 Impact factor: 7.327
Summary of key CO-OP stroke publications
| Authors | Year | Population description | Study design, intervention and control | Main findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| McEwen, S., Polatajko, P., Huijbregts, M., Ryan, J. | 2009 | Adults living in the community with chronic stroke; 3 single case experiments | Single case experiments. Intervention: CO-OP therapy was administered at the rate of one or two sessions per week, up to 10 sessions were completed. Single case paradigm, participants were their own control | -PQRS [ |
| McEwen, S., Polatajko, P., Huijbregts, M., Ryan, J. | 2010 | Adults with chronic stroke living in the community; 3 single case experiments | Single case experiments. Intervention: Up to 10 CO-OP sessions were completed. Single case paradigm, participants were their own control | -PQRS scores improved for all participants at follow-up in all trained and untrained skills, providing evidence of retention and transfer |
| Skidmore, E., Holm, M., Whyte, E., Dew, M., Dawson, D., Becker, J. | 2011 | Single case admitted to an inpatient rehabilitation unit, cognitively impaired; Age 31; male; time since stroke 7 days | Single case study. Intervention 10 45-min CO-OP sessions. In addition, patient received usual inpatient rehabilitation | -Mean improvement of 6.1 on COPM [ |
| -Pittsburgh Rehabilitation participation Scale [measure rehab engagement on 6 point scale] scores improved from 3.2 to 4.9 | ||||
| -FIM™ [ | ||||
| -Improvement in self-care skills | ||||
| Skidmore, E., Dawson, D., Whyte, E., Butters, M., Dew, M., Grattan, E., Becker, J., Holm, M | 2014 | Cognitively-impaired patients admitted to an inpatient rehabilitation unit; N = 10; mean age: 68; male: 70 %; mean time since stroke: 14.5 days; mean length of stay: 22 days | RCT. Intervention: CO-OP therapy was administered daily in 30–40 min sessions for the duration of length of stay | -CO-OP participants demonstrated less disability than control participants, FIM™ 117 vs 96 |
| Control: dose-matched sessions using scripted and open-ended questions to promote reflection on rehabilitation activities and experiences | ||||
| Both groups received usual inpatient rehabilitation in addition to the research interventions | ||||
| McEwen, S., Polatajko, H., Baum, C., Rios, J., Cirone, D., Doherty, M., Wolf, T. | 2014 | Patients admitted to an outpatient rehabilitation program; | RCT. Intervention: CO-OP therapy sessions were 45 min long and administered twice per week for a maximum of 10 sessions, instead of usual occupational therapy. More complex patients who required additional treatment received additional usual care OT | -CO-OP demonstrated a large effect over usual care on performance of functional activities (PQRS) on trained and untrained activities at follow-up, providing evidence of retention and transfer |
| Control: participants received usual occupational therapy | -CO-OP also demonstrated a medium effect on participation and self-efficacy, compared to usual care |
Project team members’ names were italicized
CO-OP cognitive orientation to daily occupational performance, PQRS performance quality rating scale, COPM Canadian occupational performance measure, FIM™ functional independence measure
Fig. 1Knowledge to action framework with CO-OP KT project content. Adapted from Graham et al. [20], the KTA framework consists of an inner knowledge creation cycle, depicted here as an inverse triangle; and a concurrent action cycle, depicted here as the external circles. CO-OP cognitive orientation to occupational performance, IF implementation facilitator, TSNs Toronto Stroke Networks, VCoP virtual community of practice, ITS interrupted time series, KT knowledge translation
Fig. 2Toronto stroke networks knowledge translation (KT) infrastructure
Outcomes, indicators, and timing for all studies
| Outcomes | Indicators and description | Timing |
|---|---|---|
| Study 1: health system: data obtained from electronic referral system, health record, and NRS | ||
| Access to inpatient rehabilitation | Monthly totals: # of inpatient rehab referrals, # of admissions, # declined; reasons for declined referrals | • −T28 to −T1 |
| Inpatient rehab outcomes | Average monthly functional independence measure (FIM™) motor and cognitive scores (admission, discharge, and change) | • −T28 to −T1 |
| Monthly frequency of discharge locations (home, home with services, assisted living facility, or acute care) | ||
| Study 2: health knowledge: data obtained from stroke rehabilitation team members and chart audits | ||
| Rehabilitation team member practice change | Chart audits will be conducted 6 months (+/−1 month) before CO-OP KT implementation as a baseline and to confirm practice gaps previously identified with interviews [ | • −T6 |
| Stroke rehab professional self-efficacy with knowledge and skills related to CO-OP | CO-OP essential elements self-efficacy tool: participants are asked to rate their ability to perform 25 elements on a 10-point scale, with 1 indicating that they cannot perform the element at all and 10 indicating that their performance is excellent. Face validity evaluated by five members of the International CO-OP Academy | • −T1 |
| Team perceptions and experiences with team processes, practices, attitudes related to adoption and sustainability of best practices for cognitive rehabilitation | Semi-structured site-specific focus group with groups of 5–8 team members at a time. Focus groups will be conducted by experienced facilitator Dr. Anne Hunt who will begin with an open-ended question “What has been your experience with facilitating recovery in patients with cognitive impairment?” Based on responses, Dr. Hunt will probe to obtain a thorough understanding of perceptions and experiences from a wide range of team members at each site | • −T1 |
| Study 3: health outcomes: data obtained from consenting individual patients | ||
| Performance on personally-meaningful, self-selected activities | The Canadian occupational performance measure (COPM) is a standardized instrument for eliciting performance issues from the client perspective, and for capturing perceived changes in performance over time [ | • Admission to inpatient rehabilitation |
| Self-efficacy to perform daily activities | The self-efficacy gauge (SEG) was designed to measure an individual’s self-efficacy in his or her ability to perform daily occupations that span a range of self-care, productivity, and leisure activities. Participants are asked to rate their confidence in their ability to perform 28 items, each on a 10-point scale, with 1 representing “not confident at all” and 10 representing “completely confident”. The SEG has very high internal consistency (0.94) and test-retest reliability (0.90) [ | |
| Health status | The stroke impact scale (SIS) [ | |
| Cognitive screening tool | The MoCA is a 30-item test of cognitive impairment that includes elements of short-term memory recall; visuospatial capacity; aspects of executive functioning; attention, concentration, and working memory; language; and orientation [ | |
CO-OP cognitive orientation to daily occupational performance, KT knowledge transfer
Fig. 3Project design and timeline