Background and Purpose - The optimal organization of rehabilitation services after discharge from a stroke unit has not been determined. This study sought to evaluate the effect of early supported discharge and continued rehabilitation at home (ESD), in terms of patient outcome 5 years after stroke and changes in selected data over time. Methods - Eighty-three patients from Southwest Stockholm, mildly or moderately impaired 5 to 7 days after acute stroke, were enrolled in a randomized controlled trial. The core components of the ESD service were initial treatment in a stroke unit and the involvement of an outreach team to deliver and coordinate home-based rehabilitation in partnership with the patient. At the 5-year follow-up, measures used to assess patient outcome included survival, motor capacity, dysphasia, activities of daily living (ADL), social activities, subjective dysfunction, and self-reported falls. Results - Fifty-four patients (30 in the intervention group and 24 in the control group) were evaluated 5 years after stroke, at which time a significantly larger proportion of patients in the intervention group were independent in extended ADL and active in household activities. Conclusions - This ESD service has a beneficial effect on extended ADL 5 years after stroke for mildly to moderately impaired patients.
CITATION STYLE
Thorsén, A. M., Holmqvist, L. W., De Pedro-Cuesta, J., & Von Koch, L. (2005). A randomized controlled trial of early supported discharge and continued rehabilitation at home after stroke: Five-year follow-up of patient outcome. Stroke, 36(2), 297–302. https://doi.org/10.1161/01.STR.0000152288.42701.a6
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