Caregiver-mediated intervention can improve physical functional recovery of patients with chronic stroke: A randomized controlled trial

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Abstract

Background and Purpose. Patients with chronic stroke may benefit from continuing rehabilitation training after hospital discharge. This study examined whether caregiver-mediated, home-based intervention (CHI) could improve physical functioning and social participation in these patients. Methods. A single-blind, randomized, controlled 12-week trial conducted with 51 patients from 3 hospitals in Taiwan who had chronic stroke (>6 months; Brunnstrom recovery stages III-V). Patients and their caregivers in the intervention arm (n = 25) were given weekly personalized CHI trainings designed by a physical therapist. Patients in the control arm (n = 26) received visits from the therapist without intervention. All were evaluated for physical recovery through the Stroke Impact Scale, Berg Balance Scale, 10-Meter Walk Test, 6-Minute Walk Test, and Barthel Index at baseline and endpoint. Caregivers were evaluated with the Caregiver Burden Scale. Results were analyzed through Mann-Whitney U test. Results. CHI significantly improved scores of the Stroke Impact Scale: strength (control vs intervention, respectively: 1.4 vs 15.5; P = .002), mobility (-0.5 vs 13.7; P < .001), composite physical (-0.7 vs 11.2; P < .001), and general recovery domain (0.2 vs 17.4; P

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Wang, T. C., Tsai, A. C., Wang, J. Y., Lin, Y. T., Lin, K. L., Chen, J. J., … Lin, T. C. (2015). Caregiver-mediated intervention can improve physical functional recovery of patients with chronic stroke: A randomized controlled trial. Neurorehabilitation and Neural Repair, 29(1), 3–12. https://doi.org/10.1177/1545968314532030

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