Stroke rehabilitation at home before and after discharge reduced disability and improved quality of life: a randomised controlled trial

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Standard

Stroke rehabilitation at home before and after discharge reduced disability and improved quality of life : a randomised controlled trial. / Rasmussen, Rune Skovgaard; Østergaard, Ann; Kjær, Pia; Skerris, Anja; Skou, Christina T.; Christoffersen, Jane; Seest, Line Skou; Poulsen, Mai Bang; Rønholt, Finn; Overgaard, Karsten.

In: Clinical Rehabilitation, Vol. 30, No. 3, 03.2016, p. 225-236.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Rasmussen, RS, Østergaard, A, Kjær, P, Skerris, A, Skou, CT, Christoffersen, J, Seest, LS, Poulsen, MB, Rønholt, F & Overgaard, K 2016, 'Stroke rehabilitation at home before and after discharge reduced disability and improved quality of life: a randomised controlled trial', Clinical Rehabilitation, vol. 30, no. 3, pp. 225-236. https://doi.org/10.1177/0269215515575165

APA

Rasmussen, R. S., Østergaard, A., Kjær, P., Skerris, A., Skou, C. T., Christoffersen, J., Seest, L. S., Poulsen, M. B., Rønholt, F., & Overgaard, K. (2016). Stroke rehabilitation at home before and after discharge reduced disability and improved quality of life: a randomised controlled trial. Clinical Rehabilitation, 30(3), 225-236. https://doi.org/10.1177/0269215515575165

Vancouver

Rasmussen RS, Østergaard A, Kjær P, Skerris A, Skou CT, Christoffersen J et al. Stroke rehabilitation at home before and after discharge reduced disability and improved quality of life: a randomised controlled trial. Clinical Rehabilitation. 2016 Mar;30(3):225-236. https://doi.org/10.1177/0269215515575165

Author

Rasmussen, Rune Skovgaard ; Østergaard, Ann ; Kjær, Pia ; Skerris, Anja ; Skou, Christina T. ; Christoffersen, Jane ; Seest, Line Skou ; Poulsen, Mai Bang ; Rønholt, Finn ; Overgaard, Karsten. / Stroke rehabilitation at home before and after discharge reduced disability and improved quality of life : a randomised controlled trial. In: Clinical Rehabilitation. 2016 ; Vol. 30, No. 3. pp. 225-236.

Bibtex

@article{4f578f7dd2e143fe9109d91e6d5fe8e9,
title = "Stroke rehabilitation at home before and after discharge reduced disability and improved quality of life: a randomised controlled trial",
abstract = "OBJECTIVE: To evaluate if home-based rehabilitation of inpatients improved outcome compared to standard care.DESIGN: Interventional, randomised, safety/efficacy open-label trial.SETTING: University hospital stroke unit in collaboration with three municipalities.SUBJECTS: Seventy-one eligible stroke patients (41 women) with focal neurological deficits hospitalised in a stroke unit for more than three days and in need of rehabilitation.INTERVENTIONS: Thirty-eight patients were randomised to home-based rehabilitation during hospitalization and for up to four weeks after discharge to replace part of usual treatment and rehabilitation services. Thirty-three control patients received treatment and rehabilitation following usual guidelines for the treatment of stroke patients.MAIN MEASURES: Ninety days post-stroke the modified Rankin Scale score was the primary endpoint. Other outcome measures were the modified Barthel-100 Index, Motor Assessment Scale, CT-50 Cognitive Test, EuroQol-5D, Body Mass Index and treatment-associated economy.RESULTS: Thirty-one intervention and 30 control patients completed the study. Patients in the intervention group achieved better modified Rankin Scale score (Intervention median = 2, IQR = 2-3; Control median = 3, IQR = 2-4; P=0.04). EuroQol-5D quality of life median scores were improved in intervention patients (Intervention median = 0.77, IQR = 0.66-0.79; Control median = 0.66, IQR = 0.56 - 0.72; P=0.03). The total amount of home-based training in minutes highly correlated with mRS, Barthel, Motor Assessment Scale and EuroQol-5D{\texttrademark} scores (P-values ranging from P<0.00001 to P=0.01). Economical estimations of intervention costs were lower than total costs of standard treatment.CONCLUSION: Early home-based rehabilitation reduced disability and increased quality of life. Compared to standard care, home-based stroke rehabilitation was more cost-effective.",
author = "Rasmussen, {Rune Skovgaard} and Ann {\O}stergaard and Pia Kj{\ae}r and Anja Skerris and Skou, {Christina T.} and Jane Christoffersen and Seest, {Line Skou} and Poulsen, {Mai Bang} and Finn R{\o}nholt and Karsten Overgaard",
note = "{\textcopyright} The Author(s) 2015.",
year = "2016",
month = mar,
doi = "10.1177/0269215515575165",
language = "English",
volume = "30",
pages = "225--236",
journal = "Clinical Rehabilitation",
issn = "0269-2155",
publisher = "SAGE Publications",
number = "3",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Stroke rehabilitation at home before and after discharge reduced disability and improved quality of life

T2 - a randomised controlled trial

AU - Rasmussen, Rune Skovgaard

AU - Østergaard, Ann

AU - Kjær, Pia

AU - Skerris, Anja

AU - Skou, Christina T.

AU - Christoffersen, Jane

AU - Seest, Line Skou

AU - Poulsen, Mai Bang

AU - Rønholt, Finn

AU - Overgaard, Karsten

N1 - © The Author(s) 2015.

PY - 2016/3

Y1 - 2016/3

N2 - OBJECTIVE: To evaluate if home-based rehabilitation of inpatients improved outcome compared to standard care.DESIGN: Interventional, randomised, safety/efficacy open-label trial.SETTING: University hospital stroke unit in collaboration with three municipalities.SUBJECTS: Seventy-one eligible stroke patients (41 women) with focal neurological deficits hospitalised in a stroke unit for more than three days and in need of rehabilitation.INTERVENTIONS: Thirty-eight patients were randomised to home-based rehabilitation during hospitalization and for up to four weeks after discharge to replace part of usual treatment and rehabilitation services. Thirty-three control patients received treatment and rehabilitation following usual guidelines for the treatment of stroke patients.MAIN MEASURES: Ninety days post-stroke the modified Rankin Scale score was the primary endpoint. Other outcome measures were the modified Barthel-100 Index, Motor Assessment Scale, CT-50 Cognitive Test, EuroQol-5D, Body Mass Index and treatment-associated economy.RESULTS: Thirty-one intervention and 30 control patients completed the study. Patients in the intervention group achieved better modified Rankin Scale score (Intervention median = 2, IQR = 2-3; Control median = 3, IQR = 2-4; P=0.04). EuroQol-5D quality of life median scores were improved in intervention patients (Intervention median = 0.77, IQR = 0.66-0.79; Control median = 0.66, IQR = 0.56 - 0.72; P=0.03). The total amount of home-based training in minutes highly correlated with mRS, Barthel, Motor Assessment Scale and EuroQol-5D™ scores (P-values ranging from P<0.00001 to P=0.01). Economical estimations of intervention costs were lower than total costs of standard treatment.CONCLUSION: Early home-based rehabilitation reduced disability and increased quality of life. Compared to standard care, home-based stroke rehabilitation was more cost-effective.

AB - OBJECTIVE: To evaluate if home-based rehabilitation of inpatients improved outcome compared to standard care.DESIGN: Interventional, randomised, safety/efficacy open-label trial.SETTING: University hospital stroke unit in collaboration with three municipalities.SUBJECTS: Seventy-one eligible stroke patients (41 women) with focal neurological deficits hospitalised in a stroke unit for more than three days and in need of rehabilitation.INTERVENTIONS: Thirty-eight patients were randomised to home-based rehabilitation during hospitalization and for up to four weeks after discharge to replace part of usual treatment and rehabilitation services. Thirty-three control patients received treatment and rehabilitation following usual guidelines for the treatment of stroke patients.MAIN MEASURES: Ninety days post-stroke the modified Rankin Scale score was the primary endpoint. Other outcome measures were the modified Barthel-100 Index, Motor Assessment Scale, CT-50 Cognitive Test, EuroQol-5D, Body Mass Index and treatment-associated economy.RESULTS: Thirty-one intervention and 30 control patients completed the study. Patients in the intervention group achieved better modified Rankin Scale score (Intervention median = 2, IQR = 2-3; Control median = 3, IQR = 2-4; P=0.04). EuroQol-5D quality of life median scores were improved in intervention patients (Intervention median = 0.77, IQR = 0.66-0.79; Control median = 0.66, IQR = 0.56 - 0.72; P=0.03). The total amount of home-based training in minutes highly correlated with mRS, Barthel, Motor Assessment Scale and EuroQol-5D™ scores (P-values ranging from P<0.00001 to P=0.01). Economical estimations of intervention costs were lower than total costs of standard treatment.CONCLUSION: Early home-based rehabilitation reduced disability and increased quality of life. Compared to standard care, home-based stroke rehabilitation was more cost-effective.

U2 - 10.1177/0269215515575165

DO - 10.1177/0269215515575165

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 25758941

VL - 30

SP - 225

EP - 236

JO - Clinical Rehabilitation

JF - Clinical Rehabilitation

SN - 0269-2155

IS - 3

ER -

ID: 162852617