La Trobe

A Network of Sites and Upskilled Therapists to Deliver Best-Practice Stroke Rehabilitation of the Arm: Protocol for a Knowledge Translation Study

journal contribution
posted on 2024-12-18, 02:43 authored by Leeanne CareyLeeanne Carey, Liana CahillLiana Cahill, JM Blennerhassett, M Nilsson, Natasha LanninNatasha Lannin, V Thijs, S Hillier, DA Cadilhac, GA Donnan, Meg MorrisMeg Morris, L Churilov, M Walker, S Ramanathan, M Pollack, E May, GC Cloud, S McGowan, Kulasekara WijeratneKulasekara Wijeratne, M Budge, F McKinnon, J Olver, T Hogg, Michael Murray, Brendon HaslamBrendon Haslam, Irene KoukoulasIrene Koukoulas, Brittni NielsenBrittni Nielsen, Yvonne Mak-YuenYvonne Mak-Yuen, Megan TurvilleMegan Turville, Cheryl NeilsonCheryl Neilson, Anna ButlerAnna Butler, J Kim, Thomas MatyasThomas Matyas
Implementation of evidence-informed rehabilitation of the upper limb is variable, and outcomes for stroke survivors are often suboptimal. We established a national partnership of clinicians, survivors of stroke, researchers, healthcare organizations, and policy makers to facilitate change. The objectives of this study are to increase access to best-evidence rehabilitation of the upper limb and improve outcomes for stroke survivors. This prospective pragmatic, knowledge translation study involves four new specialist therapy centers to deliver best-evidence upper-limb sensory rehabilitation (known as SENSe therapy) for survivors of stroke in the community. A knowledge-transfer intervention will be used to upskill therapists and guide implementation. Specialist centers will deliver SENSe therapy, an effective and recommended therapy, to stroke survivors in the community. Outcomes include number of successful deliveries of SENSe therapy by credentialled therapists; improved somatosensory function for stroke survivors; improved performance in self-selected activities, arm use, and quality of life; treatment fidelity and confidence to deliver therapy; and for future implementation, expert therapist effect and cost-effectiveness. In summary, we will determine the effect of a national partnership to increase access to evidence-based upper-limb sensory rehabilitation following stroke. If effective, this knowledge-transfer intervention could be used to optimize the delivery of other complex, evidence-based rehabilitation interventions.<p></p>

Funding

This work is funded by the National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC) of Australia, Partnership grant (GNT1134495). We also acknowledge funding support for development of SENSe therapy from NHMRC Project grants (GNT191214, GNT307902, GNT1022694), and ongoing development from an NHMRC Ideas grant (GNT2004443) and NHMRC Centre of Research Excellence (GNT1077898). We acknowledge support for L.M.C. from NHMRC (GNT307905); for N.A.L. from Heart Foundation (GNT102055); and for L.S.C., M.T., and Y.M.-Y. from La Trobe University scholarships and Australian Government Research Training Scholarships.

History

Publication Date

2023-12-01

Journal

Healthcare

Volume

11

Issue

23

Article Number

3080

Pagination

16p.

Publisher

Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute

ISSN

2227-9032

Rights Statement

© 2023 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).