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People who have had a stroke benefit from opportunities to practice the activities they need to re-learn. It is common practice to give patients written exercises to guide their practice out of therapy session. Whilst more practice is better, it is important that the activities are practiced accurately, to ensure that the right movement patterns are re-learned.
The aim of this study, is to evaluate whether an intervention providing in-patients who have had a stroke an opportunity to use a simple video guide to help them perform their exercises accurately would improve clinical outcomes. Watching an activity being performed helps you to learn the activity more effectively. The focus of this study is arm rehabilitation.
The participants will be adult in-patients in Leeds Teaching Hospitals Trust, and will have had a first time stroke that has left them with some arm weakness.
The participants will be matched according to the severity of their weakness, then randomly allocated to either a treatment as usual group, or an intervention group. Those in the intervention group will have their exercises for their arm and hand recorded onto a tablet during their normal therapy session. They will then be lent the tablet for the duration of the trial, so they can have a visual guide to help them throughout the trial period. Ward staff will be shown how to use the tablet to help any participants who struggle with the technology.
Measurements will be made before and after the trial period to look at ability to move the arm and hand, quality of movement, self-efficacy and time spent exercising. Participants and staff will be asked for their experiences of the intervention or normal practice.
This is a feasibility study with an embedded process evaluation.
Full description
This is a small single blind RCT. The outcome assessor will be blinded to the participants status as either in the treatment as usual group or the intervention group. As a feasibility study conducted as part of the development, and planned larger evaluation, of a complex intervention we have drawn heavily on the MRC guidance on complex interventions and process evaluation.
All participants will have the capacity to make an informed decision to consent.
The participants who are suitable to be included in the study will be consented by the student researcher (with support from the Speech and language therapist if needed). This will be done in accordance with the process described in section A27-1.
To reduce the possibility of patients who have severe impairment or other excluding factors being approached an initial screening will have occurred by the direct clinical care team of the potential participants medical notes. This occurs as part of their normal initial assessment of the patient.
Eight patients with mild upper limb impairment will be recruited and eight with moderate upper limb impairment. (Three of each category for both treatment as usual and intervention group).
A tally will be kept of those with mild and moderate weakness in their upper limb, and recruitment will cease once eight participants of each category have been consented. The trial period will commence as a rolling start, with each person starting the trial period as soon as their 'matched pair' has been recruited. Each of the matched pair will be randomly allocated into either control or intervention group.
Once the participants have been consented, they will undergo their baseline assessments. This will be carried out by an experienced neurological physiotherapist from another ward (Blinded to the randomisation into the control or intervention group). The assessment session will be carried out in one of the ward rehabilitation rooms, and is predicted to take no more than half an hour, though more time will be allowed should the participant have further questions.
The patients in the control group will then have their therapy programme as normal for the next four weeks, or until discharge, whichever comes sooner.
The patients in the intervention group will have their next therapy session in the normal manner, but during or at the end of the session,(whichever is most appropriate) the exercises prescribed by the therapist will be filmed onto a tablet. It will consist of the therapist performing the exercise three times to allow the participant to get the idea of the correct movement, and then the participant performing the action three times with the therapist giving verbal prompts to correct the movement.For the intervention group the therapist will be asked to film any upper limb exercises prescribed onto an i-pad, which will provided (one for each patient). Filming will be from two to three feet away, and from whatever angle the physiotherapist feels is most appropriate. The video need not include all of the patient or physiotherapist demonstrator, but should include as much of their body as the therapist feels is needed for guidance.
The i-pad can then be taken by the patient to be used by their bedside. Participants will be given a prompt sheet for playing back their exercises, and the I-pad interface will have been developed with The University of Leeds School of Medicine technology department to make it as intuitive as possible.
For both patient groups, if the therapist would normally provide a written exercise sheet this will also be provided.
The exercises prescribed will be updated by the therapist as deemed appropriate according to the participants needs, either by re-recording them in a subsequent session, and/or updating written exercise sheets.
The participants in the intervention group will have access to the tablet they are using for the duration of the study, labelled and kept in their private bedside locker. Ward staff will be prompted to ensure that during the day if a patient wishes to do their exercises they are 'set up' to do so, either by ensuring exercise sheets are to hand, or the tablet is within reach, and if necessary switched on and opened, with prompts how to start the video (as the technology may be unfamiliar to the patients.) Ward staff will also ensure the tablets are regularly charged.
At the end of the four week period, or up to 72 hours before discharge, the baseline assessment barrage will be repeated by the baseline assessor (still blinded, participants prompted not to divulge group allocation) In order to evaluate the experience of exercising out of therapy sessions, the research physiotherapist will conduct a one to one interview with some of the patient participants. They will be selected via purposive sampling, accounting for initial weakness category and previous experience of using tablet technology. Open ended questions will be used to find out how easy they found it to exercise their affected arm out of therapy time.
Questions asked will be:
Therapy staff will be asked in a focus group setting:
Interviews with patient participants will be carried out in the treatment rooms or by the patients bed if this is their preference.
The Physiotherapy team focus group will be carried out in one of the available treatment rooms.
Patient participants will be asked if they wish to have feedback on the study, and if so home or discharge destination contact details will be recorded, and kept securely, so the participants can receive a written summary of the outcome after the student write up.
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14 participants in 2 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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