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Rehabilitation and recovery – principles of rehabilitation

4.0 Introduction

This section addresses the core principles of rehabilitation and its delivery.  All subsequent sections of this chapter should be read keeping these overarching principles and reco...

4.1 Rehabilitation potential

Decisions about rehabilitation potential have far-reaching consequences for individual patients, including the withdrawal of active rehabilitation. The term ‘rehabilitation potenti...

Recommendations
A

People with stroke should be considered to have the potential to benefit from rehabilitation at any point after their stroke. [2023]

B

People with stroke and their carers should be involved in a collaborative process with healthcare professionals to agree rehabilitation options, guided by the person’s own needs, goals and preferences. [2023]

C

The multidisciplinary team should consider all available rehabilitation options and recommend the service that is most likely to enable the person with stroke to meet their goals and needs.

  • For those people for whom standard rehabilitation services (such as early supported discharge, or community stroke teams) may not be appropriate, collaborative local decision making should ensure that a stroke-skilled multidisciplinary team works with the person with stroke and their family towards achievable and meaningful goals, which may be in conjunction with other statutory or voluntary provision;
  • People with stroke involving the spinal cord should be referred to specialist spinal injuries service for advice and support and/or to provide rehabilitation. [2023]
D

Stroke rehabilitation should be needs-led and not time-limited, and available to those people with stroke for whom:

  • ongoing needs have been identified by the person with stroke, their carer(s) or the multidisciplinary team across all areas of stroke recovery, e.g. functional abilities, mental health, cognitive function, psychological well-being, education regarding stroke, social participation, management of complications and care needs;
  • and their needs remain related to the stroke and/or are best met by the skills of the stroke team. [2023]
E

Clinicians should facilitate shared decision making and communicate the likelihood of the individual achieving their goals in an informed, compassionate, and individualised manner. [2023]

F

From an early stage in rehabilitation, clinicians should prepare people with stroke and their carer(s) that discharge from the service will occur and ensure an adequate transition plan is created collaboratively.  Discharge information should include how to re-access services if required. [2023]

G

Statistically derived tools which predict future functional capacity should be considered to guide expectations of treatment or to predict risk:

  • Tools should only be applied in the population and phase of stroke within which the tool was developed;
  • Clinicians need to be trained to understand the limitations of tools, and how to use the tools effectively. [2023]
H

The multidisciplinary team should complete weekly reviews whilst providing rehabilitation in any setting, considering the needs, goals and progress of the person with stroke, and their treatment and discharge plans.  The choice of rehabilitation pathway should be regularly reviewed to ensure rehabilitation continues to best meet the person’s needs. [2023]

I

For people with stroke who are no longer receiving stroke rehabilitation at 6 months, a primary focus of the 6 month review should be to identify and redirect those with ongoing needs and/or goals back into stroke services. Reviews should be holistic in nature and be completed by a stroke specialist with appropriate skills and expertise. [2023]

J

People with stroke should receive a holistic annual review conducted by a professional with a broad range of skills and knowledge across physical, psychological and social domains. Those for whom new or ongoing stroke rehabilitation goals can be identified and agreed should be referred to stroke services for further rehabilitation. [2023]

Sources, evidence to recommendations, implications

4.2 Rehabilitation approach – intensity of therapy (motor recovery and function)

Rehabilitation is an adaptive process, and the practice and repetition of functional tasks for months or years is a key component of optimal recovery. The evidence for intensity of...

Recommendations
A

People with motor recovery goals undergoing rehabilitation after a stroke should receive a minimum of 3 hours of multidisciplinary therapy a day (delivered or supervised by a therapist or rehabilitation assistant focused on exercise, motor retraining and/or functional practice), at least 5 days out of 7, to enable the range of required interventions to be delivered at an effective dose.

  • Rehabilitation programmes should be individualised to account for comorbidities, baseline activity levels, post-stroke fatigue, tolerance, goals and preferences.  Therapy can be paced throughout the day, to accumulate at least 3 hours of motor/functional therapy;
  • For people unable to tolerate 3 hours of therapy a day, the barriers to doing so should be fully assessed and actively managed with strategies to ensure they are able to participate in therapy and be active as far as possible;
  • People undergoing rehabilitation after a stroke should be supported to remain active for up to 6 hours a day (including therapist-delivered therapy), for example through the use of open gyms, self-practice, carer-assisted practice, engaging in activities of daily living, and activities promoting cardiovascular fitness. [2023]
B

Services delivering rehabilitation for people after stroke should:

  • deliver a range of individualised one-to-one therapies, structured semi-supervised practice and group work (including rehabilitation gym sessions and a range of exercise and activity groups relevant to the person’s needs);
  • have access to adequate rehabilitation space such as a gym and areas for functional practice (e.g. kitchen and bathroom), appropriate space to accommodate group work, and quiet space for psychological assessment and sensitive discussions;
  • ensure that delivery of rehabilitation intensity includes education for both the person with stroke and their family/carers to better understand their difficulties, and their recovery and rehabilitation;
  • be organised to encourage and support people with stroke to remain active outside of therapist-delivered sessions. [2023]
C

In the first two weeks after stroke, therapy targeted at the recovery of mobility should consist of frequent, short interventions every day, typically beginning between 24 and 48 hours after stroke onset. [2016]

D

Multidisciplinary stroke teams should incorporate the practice of functional skills gained in therapy into the person’s daily routine in a consistent manner, and the care environment should support people with stroke to practise their activities as much as possible. Functional activities should be individualised to the person’s goals and interests. [2023]

E

Healthcare staff who support people with stroke to practise their activities should do so under the guidance of a qualified therapist. [2016]

Sources, evidence to recommendations, implications

4.3 Rehabilitation approach – goal setting

Goal setting can be defined as a behavioural target that is central to rehabilitation, but is also effective in secondary risk factor reduction such as weight loss, smoking cessati...

Recommendations
A

People with stroke should be actively involved in their rehabilitation through:

  • having their feelings, wishes and expectations for recovery understood and acknowledged;
  • participating in the process of goal setting unless they choose not to, or are unable to because of the severity of their cognitive or linguistic impairments;
  • being given help to understand the process of goal setting, and to define and articulate their personal goals. [2016]
B

People with stroke should be helped to identify goals that:

  • are meaningful and relevant to them;
  • are challenging but achievable;
  • aim to achieve both short-term (days/weeks) and long-term (weeks/months) objectives;
  • are documented, with specific, time-bound and measurable outcomes;
  • have achievement measured and evaluated in a consistent way;
  • include family/carers where this is appropriate;
  • are used to guide and inform therapy and treatment. [2016]
C

People with stroke should be supported and involved in a self-management approach to their rehabilitation goals. [2016]

Sources, evidence to recommendations, implications

4.4 Self-management

There is increasing evidence of psychological factors that influence confidence and adjustment to life after stroke. Self-efficacy has been defined as an ‘individual’s belief in th...

Recommendations
A

People with stroke should be offered self-management support based on self-efficacy, aimed at the knowledge and skills needed to manage life after stroke, with particular attention given to this at reviews and transfers of care. [2016]

B

People with stroke whose motivation and engagement in rehabilitation appears reduced should be assessed for changes in self-esteem, self-efficacy or identity and mood. [2016]

C

People with significant changes in self-esteem, self-efficacy or identity after stroke should be offered information, support and advice and considered for one or more of the following psychological interventions:

  • increased social interaction;
  • increased exercise;
  • other psychosocial interventions, such as psychosocial education groups. [2016]
Sources, evidence to recommendations, implications

4.5 Remotely delivered therapy and telerehabilitation

Remotely delivered therapy is rehabilitation delivered using technology, with a remote therapist personalising a programme or tasks to specifically address identified impairments o...

Recommendations
A

People undergoing rehabilitation after stroke should be considered for remotely delivered rehabilitation to augment conventional face-to-face rehabilitation.  Telerehabilitation programmes should:

  • be personalised to the individual’s goals and preferences;
  • be used when it is considered to be the most beneficial option to promote recovery and should not be used as a substitute for essential in-person rehabilitation;
  • be monitored and adapted by the therapist according to progress towards goals;
  • be supplemented with face-to-face reviews and include the facility for contact with the therapist as required. [2023]
B

People receiving rehabilitation after stroke should have an assessment of their ability to use assistive technology and programmes and equipment should be adapted accordingly. [2023]

C

Stroke services should ensure adequate technology is available to enable access to telerehabilitation for people with stroke (this could be resourced via grants, community health services, library loan services etc.). [2023]

D

People with stroke receiving telerehabilitation should be trained and supported in the use of the appropriate technology. [2023]

E

Stroke rehabilitation staff who are recommending the use of telerehabilitation devices should be trained in their use, technological specification and limitations. This should include the review of technologies for appropriateness, safety and information governance (storage of personal data).  [2023]

F

Therapists should promote engagement and adherence to telerehabilitation through a coaching style relationship with the person with stroke. [2023]

Sources, evidence to recommendations, implications
Source
A-F

Guideline Development Group consensus

Evidence to recommendations

The evidence base for remotely delivered therapy is new and developing. The evidence reviewed was heterogeneous in terms of the types of remote therapy, location (hospital versus home), comparison group and the selection of patients, which makes synthesis challenging. A systematic review of 31 studies showed high levels of adherence to telerehabilitation, interventions observed were comparable to in-person rehabilitation and no safety concerns related to the delivery of telerehabilitation interventions were reported. A systematic review and meta-analysis of 13 studies of technology-based distant physical rehabilitation interventions found comparable effects to traditional treatments on ADL but not walking, although there was heterogeneity in the interventions and people with cognitive impairments were often excluded (Rintala et al, 2019). A Cochrane review of 22 RCTs of telerehabilitation in stroke found evidence of variable quality from heterogeneous studies suggesting no difference between telerehabilitation and conventional rehabilitation (Laver et al, 2020). Limited data were reported on safety and economic analyses. Many studies were small, pilot and/or non-randomised and did not account for attrition from the intervention. Few studies had long-term follow-up and there was variability in the level of detail provided about the intervention, including personalisation and adherence. The evidence base is therefore of insufficient quality to strongly recommend specific remotely delivered therapy approaches. Therefore, the Guideline Development Group has made consensus recommendations for this topic. [2023]

Consideration needs to be given to the person with stroke being cognitively able to manage the approach being used, being motivated to participate, having appropriate privacy and physical space where required, and their technological proficiency. [2023]

Telehealth has the potential to decrease the burden of treatment for patients with long-term and multiple conditions. It also has the ability to introduce inequities (Eddison et al, 2022). [2023]

4.6 Self-directed therapy

Self-directed rehabilitation (or self-practice) refers to approaches for promoting independent therapeutic activity away from a clinical setting (Da-Silva et al, 2018). Self-direct...

Recommendations
A

People with stroke should be offered training and resources to support them to carry out appropriately targeted self-directed therapy practice in addition to their standard rehabilitation, in accordance with the individual’s goals and preferences. Self directed therapy should be monitored and reviewed regularly. [2023]

B

People with stroke who are able to follow regimes independently or with the support of a carer should be considered for self-directed rehabilitation to increase practice in addition to standard rehabilitation; for example, patients undergoing constraint-induced movement therapy, electrical stimulation or computerised speech and language therapy. [2023]

C

For people undergoing rehabilitation after stroke, the use of competition (with self or others) may be considered to give people motivation to practise self-directed rehabilitation. [2023]

Sources, evidence to recommendations, implications