| Literature DB >> 34179758 |
Peii Chen1,2, Jeanne Zanca1,2, Emily Esposito3, A M Barrett4,5.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To identify barriers and facilitators to achieving optimal inpatient rehabilitation outcome among individuals with spatial neglect (SN).Entities:
Keywords: EBP, evidence-based practice; Hemispatial neglect; Neurological rehabilitation; OT, occupational therapist; PT, physical therapist; Rehabilitation; Rehabilitation hospitals; SN, spatial neglect; Stroke rehabilitation
Year: 2021 PMID: 34179758 PMCID: PMC8212009 DOI: 10.1016/j.arrct.2021.100122
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Arch Rehabil Res Clin Transl ISSN: 2590-1095
Demographic information and clinical experience of focus group participants
| Characteristics | Occupational Therapists (n=15) | Physical Therapists (n=14) | Both (N=29) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Female, n (%) | 14 (93.3) | 10 (71.4) | 24 (82.8) |
| Age (y), median (IQR) | 30 (26-33) | 29 (28-30) | 29 (27-32) |
| Race, n (%) | |||
| White | 12 (80.0) | 13 (92.9) | 25 (86.2) |
| Asian | 2 (13.3) | 1 (7.1) | 3 (10.3) |
| Other | 1 (6.7) | 0 | 1 (4.0) |
| Hispanic, n (%) | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Level of education, n (%) | |||
| Bachelor's degree | 0 | 1 (7.1) | 1 (3.4) |
| Master's degree | 13 (86.7) | 0 | 13 (44.8) |
| Doctorate degree | 2 (13.3) | 13 (92.9) | 15 (51.7) |
| Clinical experience | |||
| Time in any rehabilitation (y), median (IQR) | 2.5 (2-5.5) | 5 (4-6) | 4 (2.5-5.5) |
| Time in inpatient neurorehabilitation (y), median (IQR) | 2.5 (2-5) | 4 (2.5-5) | 4 (2-5) |
| Current time in inpatient neurorehabilitation (h/wk), median (IQR) | 32.5 (20-40) | 30 (25-40) | 32.5 (25-40) |
Abbreviation: IQR, interquartile range.
Fig 1Themes identified pertaining to barriers and facilitators at 5 levels.
Patient-focused barriers and facilitators with syntheses and example quotes
| Barriers | Syntheses and Quotes |
|---|---|
| Symptoms of SN | Many therapists described how SN creates impairments of postural control and balance that render them unable to participate in many activities needed for functional improvement, such as gait training or practice of transfers. “They're going to have the same physical impairments as someone who doesn't have [SN]. So it's the same problem plus more. . . . A lot of times you may not be able to address the strength and mobility until you have addressed the vision or neglect enough to make [the therapy] functional.” – PT “. . . if [SN] really affects their midline or their sitting balance, you can't [train them to] do toilet transfers or wheelchair transfers.” – OT “[Because of problems in] their postural control and sitting balance, I'm probably not going to get that patient on to [the robotic rehabilitation systems we have available].” – OT One SN symptom discussed in length was distractibility or “attention problems.” Patients with SN would be distracted by stimuli in the ipsilesional side of space, making it more difficult for them to engage in therapy activities. “Their world is so limited that anything on that unaffected side is going to really pull that attention. You have people who are externally distracted . . . or you have the people who are internally distracted–‘pain, pain, pain, I have pain, I have pain.’ You have to kind of overcome some of those barriers before you can even get to them to the point of attending to the left. . . .” – OT Many therapists conceptualized SN as poor spatial awareness of the contralesional side of space. “They're sitting there, and they just don't know. . . . You just can't leave them at the edge of the mat [because] it's unpredictable. Their arm could slip off, but they don't have protective extension reactions, and they just go down.” – PT “They're not aware. . . . You ask them where's your cell phone, and they say ‘oh it's right there on the table’ and then you spin them around [so that the cell phone and table are now in the other side of space relative to their body] and they say ‘well I know it's on the table, but the table's not there.’” – OT “. . . getting their arm caught in the wheelchair when they're sitting down. . . . Decreased awareness of a body part [is] kind of alarming.” – OT |
| SN-related self-awareness problems | In addition to using “awareness problems” or “poor insight” to describe SN symptoms, therapists often used the same terminology to refer to failure to recognize one's own deficits, a phenomenon known as anosognosia. Therapists reported observing this phenomenon most with patients who had higher function levels, such as the ability to walk, and whose anosognosia became a safety issue. “They don't realize that they're missing things on the left.” – OT “[With] those more ambulatory patients, you would think that their awareness is better, but they're in such denial. They could crash into something 14 times in one lap around the gym, and they're like ‘I'm fine, I'm fine.’” – OT “The inability to recognize that [SN is] even present is pretty significant.” – PT “Insight” was also discussed in terms of recognizing one's own improvement or understanding feedback provided by therapists. This may have led to poor rehabilitation progress, which could be frustrating to therapists as well as patients. “Sometimes they don't even realize that they are making small progress, and they think it's opposite. They think ‘I'm not getting any better.’ I [would explain to them] that I was giving you 95 million auditory cues when you first came in 5 days ago, and now I'm just saying look left and you're finding what you're supposed to see.” – OT “You're doing the same thing [but] getting no results. . . . Maybe you've tried literally everything that you know. It doesn't matter because they have no idea.” – PT |
| Low motivation or poor therapy engagement | Some patients were not interested in doing activities designed to address SN, perceiving them to be unrelated to their personal goals, such as return to walking. “From a patient perspective, we're whipping out paper and pencil, [but] they want to be up and moving. . . . I had one [patient], and all he cared about was walking. He didn't realize that doing [prism adaptation treatment] would help him walk in a safer manner, but the only thing on his mind was ‘I wanna walk,’ so anytime I set [prism adaptation treatment equipment] up for him, he didn't want to do it. So depending on the patient, it might just not be what their priority is.” – OT Therapists also shared that this barrier may result from unrealistic expectations about the short-term outcomes of rehabilitation. “‘I go into the hospital to get fixed, to get cured.’ [However] this is a type of injury that doesn't just get fixed. You have to work towards your recovery, it's going to take a lot of energy and you have to have a commitment of time, energy, and emotion from the patient and their family to recover from it.” – OT |
| Physical weakness | As an SN symptom, many patients pay little or insufficient attention to the contralesional side of their body, which was usually physically impaired. This makes it challenging to address contralesional paralysis in therapy, becoming a vicious cycle. “[I cannot] tap into improving the strength, if [they are] not aware that [the limb] is even there . . . if you're not aware that your left arm or your left leg is there, you can't work on improving their range of motion because you don't know it's there.” – OT “[If patients had some capability of using their limbs], it'd be easier to incorporate the use and hopefully . . . in the greater scheme of things, improve the neglect over time.” – PT |
| Other comorbidities | Therapists frequently mentioned “cognitive” impairments as a coexisting condition that impeded SN care delivery but typically spoke in general terms about the nature of these impairments. “Because neglect is a cognitive [disorder], you often see a lot of cognitive impairments that go with it, and so you're battling multiple fights that all impede one another.” – OT “It's really hard when we're trying to give them [the] learning experience, letting them make errors. But they really can't reflect on it or they're not aware. Maybe their cognitive functioning is low.” – PT Therapists reasoned that the existence of memory problems impaired the ability to learn compensatory strategies, to remember steps to complete a task, or to recall educational information. “Compensatory strategies are really difficult as well if memory is a factor. Correctly using a tool that [they have] never used before can be a real barrier.” – OT Patients were described to have difficulty retaining information from one therapy session to the next or applying what was taught in therapies to self-practice outside therapy hours. This was often referred to as “poor carryover.” “We provide the education. Next time you don't see the carryover as easily as with someone that doesn't have neglect.” – OT Patients with SN who had a low function level were reported to have a low arousal level as well. “It becomes another problem to just keeping them awake. How would they attend to the other side if they have no arousal? [I would do] hand-over-hand especially for low-level patients.” – PT Treatment implementation was quite challenging when working with patients with both SN and aphasia or someone who had difficulties communicating in English. “Especially when you get [patients] with right-sided neglect because you usually get some language components going on. Those are really tough.” – OT “When you try to use the interpreter, their translation of [instructions] is a lot harder to explain.” – OT Patients who were medically unstable or had other comorbidities that affected functioning were considered difficult to treat. “If the person is medically unstable, . . . I might hold off on family trainings because you want to make sure that we are maximizing [family members’] time as well.” – OT “Obesity is a huge barrier to even achieving the goals because they might not be able to reach the parts that they need to perform certain tasks.” – OT |
| Poor treatment efficiency | Patients with SN were perceived to need more assistance, longer set-up time, and a greater number of repetitions to achieve the same result (if possible) as patients without SN. “Their recovery is significantly delayed. The world is just more frustrating when you have neglect. Whether they're aware of it or not, things happen a lot slower and they just don't understand why. Whereas you might get like 10 things done in a session with someone without neglect, with someone with that's definitely cut in half.” – OT “If I'm in another room with them [and need to] pull out an aide from the therapy gym to be with me, which [took the aide] away from the main staff. The time it takes me to find the aide and bring them over also takes [me] away from the treatment as well.” – PT Using group (>2 patients per session) or concurrent (2 patients at a time) sessions were a means of increasing therapy time for patients with neurologic deficits. However, patients with SN were often not considered appropriate for groups because of their need for 1-on-1 assistance and reduced ability to interact with others. “If you have a concurrent session, you would want to get the two people doing the same task at the same time, throwing a ball back and forth, playing tic tac toe. . . . But if they need that more one-on-one attention [because they] can't attend to half the field, then it is limiting how much they can interact with the other people. So that is a factor in terms of getting them into groups and treating them efficiently in a concurrent session.” – PT |
Family member–focused barriers and facilitators with syntheses and example quotes
| Barriers | Quotes |
|---|---|
| Lack of physical, mental, or emotional preparedness | Therapists expressed concerns about whether family members who had poor physical health could monitor patients’ safety during mobility-related activities or provide necessary assistance to prevent falls. “Family members’ own medical issues are a big barrier. . . . You know that this patient is going to need physical assistance, and then [the family member will] come in with a walker and your goals change.” – OT “A patient may have a significant other, but if they are both in their 80s, or 70s, it's not really safe for the significant other to be providing the guarding or the safety that they need.” – PT “[Because of problems in] their postural control and sitting balance, I'm probably not going to get that patient on to [the robotic rehabilitation systems we have available].” – OT Readiness for adopting a caregiver role could be problematic. Some family members could get very overwhelmed. “The family member also has to feel comfortable providing the assistance 24 hours or whatever we're recommending. Sometimes we may think it's feasible, and [the patient doesn't] need that much cueing. But the family member is a little scared and they don't feel like the patient should go home.” – PT The nature of the patient-caregiver relationship might affect willingness to perform intimate care tasks. “Are they comfortable helping [the patient] in the bathroom, in the shower? If it's a mother who lives home with her son, you're going to need someone else there. [Also, consider] a brother and a sister that live together.” – PT Therapists reported the importance of considering the readiness of family members to attempt certain care tasks. “There are certain things [the family member] is still not comfortable with and goes, ‘I'm just not ready,’ I said ‘that's fine, you let me know when you are.’ I think it's about meeting them where they are and not try[ing] to push them into doing things that are outside their comfort zone because that will backfire and ultimately compromise the discharge plan.” – PT |
| Poor understanding of the diagnosis or the goal of rehabilitation | The concept of SN was not easy to understand, which often led to inappropriate provision of cues, instructions, or assistance to the patient. “[Family members] sometimes blame the patient, ‘Why can't you just do this? This is a simple cue. Look at your left.’ They don't get it. So then we have to educate them more than once, twice, depending on how receptive they are.” – PT “[Family members would say] ‘why aren't they turning their head? I'm telling them to turn their head.’ Or ‘why aren't they looking at me.’ They don't understand that it's not under the patient's control.” – PT “A lot of times a patient's spouse will come in. [They would speak in] rapid-fire speech. It's. . . . It [shows] impatience.” – OT “It's extremely distracting and depending on the patient's or the family's level of understanding as to what we're trying to accomplish. . . . You may have a nagging [family member] who's like ‘Listen, you have to turn, [the therapist] said to turn!’” – PT Therapists shared a common experience that it was easier to communicate with family members about SN if the symptoms were severe and easily noticed. However, when the symptoms were mild or subtle, it could be more difficult to explain what SN means. Thus, SN made family training more challenging. “It's easier for them to understand when it's more severe because it's so blatant. [When] it's more subtle, you're trying to explain it and as you're walking [the patient] and you're kind of hoping they run into the wall so that [the family member] can see this is what we're talking about.” – PT “[It] takes a lot longer with regard to family training purposes. Having them become familiar with what the neglect is, how to compensate for it, and all the different strategies that you have to utilize to maintain them.” – PT “[It] can be equally challenging to try and explain it. Especially when you have somebody who is already emotionally overwhelmed and is having a hard enough time absorbing basic information.” – OT |
| Family members’ behavior and inadequate levels of involvement | Therapists shared their observations about negative family dynamics (eg, problems in the interpersonal relationship between the patient and the family), low level of family engagement in care (eg, no family available to attend family training as scheduled during weekdays, insufficient engagement in care decisions), inappropriate behavior during therapy (eg, playing with the service dog, talking over the therapist, comparing the patient and other patients in the gym), and lack of willingness to take care of the patient (eg, preferring institution over community discharge). “Just seeing how they interact with each other in the rooms [as] you're walking by their room. They're not even attending to the person. They're outside talking on the phone. Even in the gym, they're talking on the phone. Then [I wonder]. . . . Are they really truly interested, are they coming forward, or are they just there to bring the clothes in or change the laundry?” – OT “A lot of [patients] just don't have family either at all or the family lives far away in another country or another state. It happens more often than not. They don't have anyone else they can rely on for training. They have like their grandnephew who can come in or check in on them. [But] some distant relative is not someone who's able to be there for them.” – PT “Sometimes culturally, you can run into issues if it's like male versus female roles in the house and providing assistance for one versus another. Sometimes it's the female's job to be the caretaker so if the male is the one that is injured, it's not so much a big deal. But if it's vice versa, [I heard one male family member said] ‘that's not what we do, our job is to not be here to take care of them.’. . . Then who would be with this person when they go home. . . ?” – PT “The family members were kind of making the person feel bad about themselves. So when they have negative things, ‘well you can't do this,’ or ‘why can't you do that, you should be able to do that, it was so easy for you before.’ Things like that that really lower a person's morale and ability to thrive so they begin to think ‘well my family says I can't do it, so I'm not going to be able to do it.’” – OT “[The presence of] family members can [be] distracting for their loved one. [The patient] might not focus as much in therapy or might not be able to tolerate or want the loved one to help them.” – OT Excessive family involvement was also reported to be problematic, requiring special effort on the part of the therapist to build a productive partnership with family caregivers. “[I have to] be firm and caring with [them] so that way they know that you care, and that they know that you are trying to serve their family member's best interests. You are there for them as well, and they have to trust you. But . . . to get that trust takes a lot of time and a lot of energy.” – OT |
Clinician-focused barriers and facilitators with syntheses and example quotes
| Barriers | Quotes |
|---|---|
| Staff limitations | Clinicians identified several issues that created barriers to SN treatment, including high staff turnover (ie, a relative great number of new staff members who need to get trained) and infrequent use of new treatments (eg, prism adaptation treatment was not used as often in one rehabilitation hospital than the others). A lack of training or experience pertaining to SN was often mentioned. Many therapists admitted their own limitations in terms of clinical experience and knowledge in implementing recommended best practice and limitations in the knowledge of other disciplines such as nursing staff and therapy aides. “I know a limitation for myself is that . . . [but] my window of experience is still pretty acute, and I don't know what this looks like in six months.” – OT “I would love to collaborate with peers [who treat SN in a later stage]. That's going to get me better prepare the patient because then I know what [the therapists in other postacute care] are working on later on. This way I can help set [the patient] up for that success, which I don't really know right now.” – PT “Part of me would want someone to demonstrate and show me each one of [the recommended treatment options]. . . . Then I would use it. But just reading “neck muscle vibration,” [I can't just use it]. I'd want to practice it first and see it and go over a protocol for each one about frequency and duration before implementing.” – OT “Most of the aides are not familiar with [SN]. When doing their ADLs, [the aides] will sometimes let the patient do it one-sided, like wash their hands and do everything on their good side and not facilitate.” – PT |
| Communication barriers among clinicians | Between primary and covering clinicians, there may be barriers created by unclear documentation (eg, coverage notes) on the plan of care specifically for SN. “[When I am covering another OT's patients, I would like to be] able to understand a patient's goals, what their focus is, whether it's transfers, focusing on scanning strategies, walker management, body placement within the walker, rather than [simply] transfers for the plan of care. By the time I'm done with the transfers, [I realize] their vision is impaired, and I'm trying to figure out what the deficit is. By the end of the session, I know what it is but I [am not] able to really hone and focus on [the deficit related to SN].” – OT “One person might be a max assist towards the right and they're a contact guard towards the left. But [the primary therapist] just [noted] the max assist. As [the covering therapist], you don't know [the detail].” – OT “Especially with weekends when there are usually far more unplanned interactions with family members. People are like ‘oh I'm here, can I try, can I get trained?’. . . . I've been in that situation on a weekend where I had a family member who wanted to be trained on how to transfer a patient out of bed. But looking at the plan of care I'm not really sure if this is appropriate, and I don't know if this is really one of the goals yet.” – OT Several therapists suggested that not having SN on the assessment template in the medical record and the lack of a standard interdisciplinary protocol for neglect rehabilitation created barriers to raising awareness of SN among clinicians. Even when the communication was displayed clearly with a specific message, it could still fail, especially between the therapy team and the support staff. “You can try anything. You can try calling the nurse the night before, writing it on [the patient's] whiteboard, putting a date, time, things like that. They will still get [the patient] dressed. [Then I cannot assess ‘dressing’ for SN.]” – OT |
Hospital-level barriers and facilitators with syntheses and example quotes
| Barrier | Quotes |
|---|---|
| Facility and equipment limitations | Having a piece of SN-specific equipment was considered a great resource, shared by an OT, but it was a barrier when multiple patients needed it at the same time. It was important to reduce distraction when treating patients with SN by having private space, which was not always available. “[Speech language pathologists] have their offices, and they can go to quiet places. OT[s] can do in-room therapy in the morning if they wanted to try that, which is still not an easy location, but it's still like a one-to-one setting, where they can guarantee they can be one-to-one with that patient in the room. In PT, it's not as easy to have an outlet to get them one-on-one in a private treatment gym at the time when there's [only] one available.” – PT Therapists also shared that they wished modification of the setup of a patient's room, which could helped patients continue working on regaining spatial attention toward the contralesional side, outside of therapy sessions. “[Patients are] only in therapy 3 hours a day, but we want to incorporate [what was learned or practiced] as much as we can outside of therapy but of course maintaining a safe environment. But . . . if they're in the room and everything is on the right all day long—their chairs are on the right, the TV's on the right . . . a quick change [in orientation] could make a big difference for their downtime in the room where they are still working more or less on those things.” – PT |
Health care system–level barriers and facilitators with syntheses and example quotes.
| Barriers | Quotes |
|---|---|
| Lack of responsive measures of progress | At the time of the present study, FIM was the measure indicating patient outcome and progress in the rehabilitation hospitals. Many therapists felt that the FIM was insensitive to SN symptoms, related deficits, or improvement. In particular, patients with SN needed supervision even if they were physically strong, leading to a lower FIM score. “You can only go up to 5 (supervision) when somebody has like a severe neglect, even they're functionally recovered because it's a safety issue. So [patients] don't reach 6 or 7.” – OT “[Patients] are now at midline, they can do this and that that they couldn't do before, but it's not going to change their FIM score. Because it's just not [sensitive] enough in order to capture that.” – PT “The FIM is required at admission and discharge, and the KF-NAP and the vision screens are only required at admission. We're not reassessing any of that at discharge, so we're not necessarily capturing the improvements [of SN].” – OT |
| Insurer-related issues | A patient's insurance coverage determines the reimbursement available to cover a specific length of stay in inpatient rehabilitation. Therapists expressed dissatisfaction with the current length of stay being 2 weeks on average for patients with stroke, which gave therapists insufficient time to address SN. They said that insurance reimbursement policies appeared to focus on physical abilities, such as walking, and did not consider SN-related safety concerns when assessing need for ongoing treatment. “[Patients] could have a severe, severe neglect but because of what they're coded as [by the insurer for physical disability], they may not get what they need. That's a huge barrier to being able to treat the neglect because you're stuck with that two-week window.” – OT “[Patients could have] so many neglect issues and safety awareness issues and things like that. But the insurance is like ‘well, they can walk’ [and does not cover longer/further treatment.]” – OT |
| Discontinuity between transitions | Clinicians in different settings had different care priorities. Not all therapists in all settings were aware of SN or were capable in treating SN. “For those folks who are perhaps going to another facility like a skilled nursing facility. . . . From my understanding, a lot of therapists there don't really have a full understanding that [SN] is a need or should be one of their domains of practice.” – OT “I would love to collaborate with peers [who treat SN in a later stage]. That's going to get me better prepare the patient because then I know what [the therapists in other postacute care] are working on later on. This way I can help set [the patient] up for that success, which I don't really know right now.” – PT “There [are] a lot of holes in our system collectively that do create these unforeseen barriers. [It is important that we] shift the paradigm of how people look at health and wellness.” – OT Patients and their family members were usually unprepared to navigate through acute care, inpatient rehabilitation, skilled nursing facilities, home services, outpatient therapies, etc. “These people come in [to the rehabilitation hospital] with expectations. . . . We're the bearers of bad news saying, ‘You're here two weeks, and we will figure out where you're going from there.’” – OT |