Canadian Stroke Best Practice Recommendations: Rehabilitation, Recovery, and Community Participation following Stroke. Part One: Rehabilitation and Recovery Following Stroke; 6th Edition Update 2019

Robert Teasell, Nancy M. Salbach, Norine Foley, Anita Mountain, Jill I. Cameron, Andrea de Jong, Nicole E. Acerra, Diana Bastasi, Sherri L. Carter, Joyce Fung, Mary Lou Halabi, Jerome Iruthayarajah, Jocelyn Harris, Esther Kim, Andrea Noland, Sepideh Pooyania, Annie Rochette, Bridget D. Stack, Erin Symcox, Debbie TimpsonSuja Varghese, Sue Verrilli, Gord Gubitz, Leanne K. Casaubon, Dar Dowlatshahi, M. Patrice Lindsay

Producción científica: Contribución a una revistaArtículorevisión exhaustiva

268 Citas (Scopus)

Resumen

The sixth update of the Canadian Stroke Best Practice Recommendations: Rehabilitation, Recovery, and Reintegration following Stroke. Part one: Rehabilitation and Recovery Following Stroke is a comprehensive set of evidence-based guidelines addressing issues surrounding impairments, activity limitations, and participation restrictions following stroke. Rehabilitation is a critical component of recovery, essential for helping patients to regain lost skills, relearn tasks, and regain independence. Following a stroke, many people typically require rehabilitation for persisting deficits related to hemiparesis, upper-limb dysfunction, pain, impaired balance, swallowing, and vision, neglect, and limitations with mobility, activities of daily living, and communication. This module addresses interventions related to these issues as well as the structure in which they are provided, since rehabilitation can be provided on an inpatient, outpatient, or community basis. These guidelines also recognize that rehabilitation needs of people with stroke may change over time and therefore intermittent reassessment is important. Recommendations are appropriate for use by all healthcare providers and system planners who organize and provide care to patients following stroke across a broad range of settings. Unlike the previous set of recommendations, in which pediatric stroke was included, this set of recommendations includes primarily adult rehabilitation, recognizing many of these therapies may be applicable in children. Recommendations related to community reintegration, which were previously included within this rehabilitation module, can now be found in the companion module, Rehabilitation, Recovery, and Community Participation following Stroke. Part Two: Transitions and Community Participation Following Stroke.

Idioma originalEnglish
Páginas (desde-hasta)763-788
Número de páginas26
PublicaciónInternational Journal of Stroke
Volumen15
N.º7
DOI
EstadoPublished - oct. 1 2020
Publicado de forma externa

Nota bibliográfica

Funding Information:
Heart and Stroke gratefully acknowledges the Rehabilitation & Recovery following Stroke writing group leaders and members, all of whom have volunteered their time and expertise to the update of these recommendations. We also appreciate all the work of the Transitions and Community Participation following Stroke writing group as several topics cross-over both parts of the Rehabilitation, Recovery and Community Participation module. These recommendations underwent external review by Kristen Bailey, Ruth Barclay, Amelia Barry, Shaun G Boe, Andrea Cole-Haskayne, Judith Deutsch, Mary Egan, Aura Kagan, Evan H Kwong, Katherine Lasiuk, Carmen Lazorek, Alto Lo, Michelle LA Nelson, Phyllis G Paterson, Kara K Patterson, Nina Simmons-Mackie, Cathy M Stinear, and Aliki Thomas. We thank the Canadian Stroke Best Practices and Quality Advisory Committee members, including Eric Smith, Anita Mountain, Leanne K Casaubon, Gord Gubitz, Dar Dowlatshahi, Dylan Blacquiere, Thalia Field, Farrell Leibovitch, Christine Papoushek, Jeffrey Habert, Barbara Campbell, Joyce Fung, Michael Hill, Tim Hillier, Thomas Jeerakathil, Eddy Lang, Pascale Lavoie, Beth Linkewich, Colleen O'Connell, Melanie Penn, Jai Shankar, Debbie Timpson, Theodore Wein, and Katie White. We acknowledge and thank Norine Foley and the evidence analysis team at workHORSE; Jerome Iruthayarajah and the Evidence-Based Review of Stroke Rehabilitation (EBRSR) team; Laurie Charest of Heart & Stroke for her coordination of the CSBPR teams and processes; Stephanie Lawrence for editing and communications; and the Heart & Stroke internal teams who contributed to the development of these recommendations and publication: Translation, Data, Knowledge and Heart, Health Policy, Advocacy and Engagement, and Creative Team and Digital Solutions. Heart & Stroke is especially grateful to the members of the Community Consultation and Review Panel who reviewed all sections of this module, shared their personal experiences and insights on what did or would have made their journey optimal. The members of the Rehabilitation, Recovery, and Community Participation CCRP included: Steve Archer, Rob Claydon, Debbie Chow, Daniel Franco, Amanda Horner, Bruce Hughes, Edith Lambert, Cathy Livingstone, David Livingstone, and Michelle McGroty. Liaison members of the scientific writing groups included Jocelyn Harris and Lynn Joseph.

Publisher Copyright:
© 2020 World Stroke Organization.

ASJC Scopus Subject Areas

  • Neurology

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