| Literature DB >> 31920947 |
Jessica Ranford1, Jessica Asiello1, Alison Cloutier2, Kimberly Cortina1, Helena Thorne1, Kimberly S Erler1,3, Natasha Frazier1, Caitlin Sadlak1, Abigail Rude1, David J Lin2.
Abstract
As acute stroke treatments advance, more people survive the initial stroke event and live with long-term neurological impairments that impact functional outcomes and quality of life. In accordance with International Classification of Functioning (ICF), living with long-term neurological impairments can limit survivors' activity performance and restrict participation in valued life roles and routines. Research focused on longitudinal analysis of functional measures and outcomes after stroke are critical for determining early indicators of long-term participation and quality of life and guiding rehabilitation resource allocation. As core members of the interdisciplinary stroke recovery treatment team throughout the post-acute care continuum, occupational therapists (OTs) directly address stroke survivors' ability to participate in meaningful daily activities to promote function and quality of life. Just as in clinical care in which multidisciplinary, team-based perspectives are vital, OTs provide invaluable perspectives for stroke recovery research. Here we describe OTs' role in a collaborative, interdisciplinary research study aimed at comprehensively understanding upper extremity motor recovery after stroke and its impact on individuals across the post-acute care continuum. This article discusses the importance of the OTs' perspectives in conducting interdisciplinary, longitudinal stroke recovery research. The challenges, strategies and recommendations for future directions of advancing the role of OTs in multidisciplinary stroke recovery research are highlighted. We use this perspective as a call to action to the stroke recovery field to incorporate OTs as members of the research team and for OTs to provide their perspectives on ongoing stroke recovery research.Entities:
Keywords: acute care; neurorehabilitation; occupational therapy; participation; stroke recovery
Year: 2019 PMID: 31920947 PMCID: PMC6928199 DOI: 10.3389/fneur.2019.01327
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neurol ISSN: 1664-2295 Impact factor: 4.003
Outcome measures administered in MGH Stroke Motor Rehabilitation and Recovery Study (SMaHRT) spanning International Classification of Functioning Domains.
| Structure-function | Fugl-meyer motor assessment | Upper extremity impairment |
| Dynamometer | Grip strength | |
| NIH stroke scale | Overall stroke severity | |
| Activity | Box and blocks | Gross motor function |
| 9-Hole peg | Fine motor function | |
| Barthel index | Performance of ADLs/iADLs | |
| Modified rankin scale | Functional independence | |
| Timed up and go | Mobility and fall risk | |
| Gait velocity | Mobility and fall risk | |
| Participation | Stroke impact scale 16 (ADLs/iADLs) | Stroke impact on function |
| Patient reported outcome measure (PROMIS-10) | Self-assessment of overall health |