Use of the paretic arm and hand is a key indicator of recovery and reintegration after stroke. A sound methodology is essential to comprehensively identify the possible factors impacting daily arm/hand use behavior. We combined ecological momentary assessment (EMA), a prompt methodology capturing real-time psycho-contextual factors, with accelerometry to investigate arm/hand behavior in the natural environment. Our aims were to determine (1) feasibility and (2) measurement validity of the combined methodology. We monitored 30 right-dominant, mild-mod-erately motor impaired chronic stroke survivors over 5 days (6 EMA prompts/day with accelerom-eters on each wrist). We observed high adherence for accelerometer wearing time (80.3%), EMA prompt response (84.6%), and generally positive user feedback upon exit interview. The customized prompt schedule and the self-triggered prompt option may have improved adherence. There was no evidence of EMA response bias nor immediate measurement reactivity. An unexpected small but significant increase in paretic arm/hand use was observed over days (12–14 min), which may be the accumulated effect of prompting that provided a reminder to choose the paretic limb. Further research that uses this combined methodology is needed to develop targeted interventions that ef-fectively change behavior and enable reintegration post-stroke.
CITATION STYLE
Chen, Y. A., Demers, M., Lewthwaite, R., Schweighofer, N., Monterosso, J. R., Fisher, B. E., & Winstein, C. (2021). A novel combination of accelerometry and ecological momentary assessment for post-stroke paretic arm/hand use: Feasibility and validity. Journal of Clinical Medicine, 10(6). https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm10061328
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