Thursday 17 February 2011

Interprofessional community-based stroke rehabilitation superior to usual care in acute stroke


In the February edition of The Canadian Journal of Neurological Sciences http://bit.ly/hPd1fE Dr. Markle-Reid and her team from Master University, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada compared an interprofessional stroke rehabilitation approach to usual care in 82 acute post 18 months community-based stroke rehabilitation patients. The primary outcome was change in health-related quality of life and functioning. The group found that stroke survivors in the intervention group showed clinically important improvements in physical and social functioning scores. Although there was a higher total per-person costs of use of health services in the intervention group compared to usual home care the difference was not statistically significant. The Canadian group concluded that a specialized, interprofessional team is a feasible and acceptable approach to community-based stroke rehabilitation that produced greater improvements in quality of life compared to usual home care.
The HandTutor and ArmTutor for upper extremity arm and hand rehabilitation and the LegTutor and 3DTutor systems for hip and knee lower extremity rehabilitation incorporate the concept of virtual functional tasks which are used to motivate the patient to do intensive active exercise practice are used by the patient in clinic and at home with home care patients being supported by tele-rehabilitation.

No comments:

Post a Comment