Co-designing resources for rehabilitation via telehealth for people with moderate to severe disability post stroke

Catherine M. Said, Emily Ramage, Cassie E. McDonald, Erin Bicknell, Danielle Hitch, Natalie A. Fini, Kelly J. Bower, Elizabeth Lynch, Adam P. Vogel, Kevin English, Gary McKay, Coralie English

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

2 Citations (Scopus)
68 Downloads (Pure)

Abstract

Objectives: The COVID-19 pandemic necessitated rapid transition to telehealth. Telehealth presents challenges for rehabilitation of stroke survivors with moderate-to-severe physical disability, which traditionally relies on physical interactions. The objective was to co-design resources to support delivery of rehabilitation via telehealth for this cohort. 

Design: Four-stage integrated knowledge translation co-design approach. Stage 1: Research team comprising researchers, clinicians and stroke survivors defined the research question and approach. Stage 2: Workshops and interviews were conducted with knowledge users (participants) to identify essential elements of the program. Stage 3: Resources developed by the research team. Stage 4: Resources reviewed by knowledge users and adapted. 

Participants: Twenty-one knowledge users (clinicians n = 11, stroke survivors n = 7, caregivers n = 3) 

Results: All stakeholders emphasised the complexities of telehealth rehabilitation for stroke and the need for individualised programs. Shared decision-making was identified as critical. Potential risks and benefits of telehealth were acknowledged and strategies to ameliorate risks and deliver effective rehabilitation were identified. Four freely available online resources were co-designed; three resources to support clinicians with shared decision-making and risk management and a decision-aid to support stroke survivors and caregivers throughout the process. Over six months, 1129 users have viewed the webpage; clinician resources were downloaded 374 times and the decision-aid was downloaded 570 times. 

Conclusions: The co-design process identified key elements for delivery of telehealth rehabilitation to stroke survivors with moderate-to-severe physical disability and led to development of resources to support development of an individualised telehealth rehabilitation plan. Future research should evaluate the effectiveness of these resources. 

Contribution of paper: 

• There is limited evidence to guide implementation of rehabilitation via telehealth for people with moderate-to-severe physical disability post stroke. 

• Co-designed resources will assist clinicians, stroke survivors and caregivers to develop and implement safe, effective, individualised rehabilitation programs via telehealth.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)109-117
Number of pages9
JournalPhysiotherapy (United Kingdom)
Volume123
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Jun 2024

Keywords

  • Caregivers
  • Decision Making
  • Rehabilitation
  • Stroke
  • Telehealth
  • Telerehabilitation

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