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Stroke - 65 Plus. Continued Active Life. (Stroke65+)

C

Central Jutland Regional Hospital

Status

Completed

Conditions

Quality of Life
Self-management

Treatments

Behavioral: Mentor

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT03183960
JutlandRH54962

Details and patient eligibility

About

Since august 2016, the researchers at a highly specialized neurorehabilitation hospital in a Danish region with 1.2 inhabitants have in cooperation with health professionals from a specialized neurorehabilitation in a Danish municipality with 336,000 inhabitants, worked through and is still working with an iterative process in the development of a novel self-management support intervention for elderly stroke individuals.The intervention is going to be implemented into the second phase- a randomized clinical controlled trial (RCT) in the project named 'Stroke - 65 plus. Continued active life'.

Full description

Background: Elderly adults represent the majority of stroke cases worldwide. Sequelae after a stroke causes the stroke individuals to live a more isolated life 5 years after the stroke. This makes the stroke individuals an especially vulnerable group of elderly people regarding social reintegration. Reintegration into the community post-stroke depends highly on support from the family. However, the stroke individual's closest relatives are at risk of developing anxiety and depression.

The aim of this study is to investigate the effect of a novel self-management intervention supporting older adults after stroke

Methods/Design: Randomized controlled observer-blind trial. More than sixty stroke survivors over 65 years will two weeks before leaving a rehabilitation hospital be randomized to either a group receiving conventional rehabilitation (control) or a novel self-management intervention addition to standard rehabilitation.

During a period of 6 months the patients will be offered additional 6-8 sessions of self-management intervention of 45-60 minutes duration by a physiotherapist or an occupational therapist.

Study outcome measurements: Stroke Self-efficacy questionnaire, Stroke Specific Quality of Life Scale and Impact on participation and Autonomy and activity by accelerometers will be evaluated at baseline, three and nine months post hospital treatment.

Patient, informal caregiver and therapist satisfaction will be with examined with questionnaires and interviews.

Discussion: Self-management interventions are promising tools for rehabilitation of self-efficacy, quality of life as well as participation and autonomy. The introduction of novel self management intervention in combination with traditional physical and occupational therapy may enhance recovery after stroke, quality of life and burden on relatives. Stroke 65+ trial will provide further evidence of self management strategies to clinicians, patients and health economists.

Enrollment

69 patients

Sex

All

Ages

65+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • stroke survivors with rehabilitation needs discharge from rehabilitation hospital to home

Exclusion criteria

  • do not understand danish Montreal Cognitive assessment (MOCA) below 20

Trial design

Primary purpose

Supportive Care

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Triple Blind

69 participants in 2 patient groups

Mentor
Experimental group
Description:
An independent centralized randomization database will provide allocation concealed to the involved clinicians and assessors. A stratified block randomization of severity of impairment will be performed within each rehabilitation hospital
Treatment:
Behavioral: Mentor
Traditional rehabilitation
Active Comparator group
Description:
An independent centralized randomization database will provide allocation concealed to the involved clinicians and assessors. A stratified block randomization of severity of impairment will be performed within each rehabilitation hospital
Treatment:
Behavioral: Mentor

Trial contacts and locations

2

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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