| Literature DB >> 32131876 |
Shuanglan Lin1, Lily Dongxia Xiao2, Diane Chamberlain1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Hospital to home transition care is a most stressful period for stroke survivors and their caregivers to learn self-management of stroke-related health conditions and to engage in rehabilitation. Health coaching has been identified as a strategy to enhance self-management of poststroke care at home. However, interventions in this field that are informed by a health coaching framework are scarce. This study will address a gap in research by testing the hypothesis that a nurse-led health coaching intervention can improve health outcomes for stroke survivors and their family caregivers in hospital to home transition care.Entities:
Keywords: Caregivers; Health coaching; Quality of life; Randomized controlled trial; Self-efficacy; Stroke; Stroke survivors; Transitional care
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32131876 PMCID: PMC7057579 DOI: 10.1186/s13063-020-4156-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Trials ISSN: 1745-6215 Impact factor: 2.279
Fig. 1Flow chart of study design
The guide for health coaching intervention program
| Health coaching session | Items | Topics |
|---|---|---|
| Three days prior to discharge | Self-care skills | To demonstrate the skills of personal hygiene, dressing, eating, maintaining continence and transferring, and how to record health coaching diary for self-monitoring. |
| Creating a safe home environment | To assess the home environment according to the stroke survivors’ needs. To demonstrate and discuss how to create a safe home environment. Examples will be provided in relation to the increase of the lighting in the living room, bedroom and toilet. Minimizing the furniture and provide the patient with an accessible area. Creating floor with non-slip, no steps, and to install handrails on the walls. | |
| Functional ability rehabilitation and exercise plan | Based on the plan provided by medical specialist, the coach will demonstrate how to perform the recommended activities, provide opportunity for stroke survivors to perform these activities and gain feedback from the coach. The training also includes, but not limited to: • Maintain the correct posture and correct the abnormal pattern. • Maintain the functional position of the paralysed limb to prevent malformation. • Active and passive function training on hemiplegic side. • Guide the transfer training, swallowing function training. | |
| Two days prior to discharge | Medication management | • Give health education about medication use, monitoring side effects and medication adherence. • Demonstrate how to record the medication using Health Coaching Diary. |
| Complication prevention | • To assess the complication prevention according to the stroke survivors’ condition. • To demonstrate how to prevent, identify and manage stroke-related complications(second stroke, bedsore, falls and urinary tract infection). |
Sources: 1. Stroke Foundation. National Stroke Audit – Rehabilitation Services Report 2016. Melbourne, Australia. 2. National Stroke Foundation. Clinical Guidelines for Stroke Management 2010. Melbourne, Australia. 3. https://strokefoundation.org.au/
Fig. 2SPIRIT figure: general procedure of enrolment, intervention and assessment
Fig. 3Theoretical framework of the stroke health-coaching program (Adapted from self-efficacy theory)