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The aim of this study was to investigate if physiotherapists had knowledge and skills in applying Bobath-based therapy (BB), also referred to as Neurodevelopmental Treatment, in the care of stroke patients and if they generally used the therapy in daily practice. This is because of the important emphasis placed on documenting the extent of the therapy given to the client groups compared in outcome studies measuring the efficacy of therapeutic interventions. The study took place as an intervention check for a large outcome study measuring the effects of BB therapy. BB therapy had been implemented on six wards, whereas six other wards did not use this approach. The physiotherapists (n /38) knowledge and skills in making decisions about applying the BB principles in all wards was measured in two steps. In step 1, the physiotherapists received a questionnaire focusing on their physiotherapy strategy, and Bobath education. In step 2, they received a case vignette describing a stroke patient and questions concerning the content of the physiotherapy provided to this patient. An expert panel judged the therapists responses to the questions of both steps. Of the physiotherapists working in the BB wards, 14 (74%) therapists generally used BB principles, whereas four (21%) therapists did not (one was uncertain). Of the physiotherapists working in the non-BB wards (n /19), three (16%) did use BB therapy whereas 10 (52%) therapists did not use the therapy (six responses were missing). The study showed that within the BB wards, the physiotherapists had followed sufficient BB education, as judged by a panel of experts, and demonstrated the knowledge and skills in applying the BB therapy, whereas in the other wards they did not. BB wards could therefore participate in the experimental group of the study measuring the effects of the Bobath therapy, and the non-BB wards could serve as proper control wards.
Falls are common after stroke. This article presents a literature review of the incidence and risk factors of falls and the consequences for professionals working with stroke patients. It is important to consider the specific problems after stroke. Depression and cognitive impairments were found to be risk factors for fall incidents after stroke. In the relevant literature many different risk factors and circumstances are described. When patients move from bed to chair, walk to the bathroom and the first few days after the patient is discharged to another setting, - all these circumstances showed high percentages of falling. A fall during hospital stay is a significant risk factor for future fall incidents. A reliable index to measure the fall risk is not (yet) available. But scores on the Barthel Index and the Timed-Up-and-Go test can be used as fall risk indicators. Fear of falling is an important complication after a fall and therefore it is recommended prior to discharge to inquire about the patients self efficacy in maintaining balance. Few intervention studies use the number of falls as an outcome measure. Exercising balance following a mass training protocol seems to diminish the risk of falling.
Background: Neurodevelopmental treatment (NDT) is a rehabilitation approach increasingly used in the care of stroke patients, although no evidence has been provided for its efficacy. Objective: To investigate the effects of NDT on the functional status and quality of life (QoL) of patients with stroke during one year after stroke onset. Methods: 324 consecutive patients with stroke from 12 Dutch hospitals were included in a prospective, non-randomised, parallel group study. In the experimental group (n = 223), nurses and physiotherapists from six neurological wards used the NDT approach, while conventional treatment was used in six control wards (n = 101). Functional status was assessed by the Barthel index. Primary outcome was poor outcome, defined as Barthel index ,12 or death after one year. QoL was assessed with the 30 item version of the sickness impact profile (SA-SIP30) and the visual analogue scale. Results: At 12 months, 59 patients (27%) in the NDT group and 24 (24%) in the non-NDT group had poor outcome (corresponding adjusted odds ratio = 1.7 (95% confidence interval, 0.8 to 3.5)). At discharge the adjusted odds ratio was 0.8 (0.4 to 1.5) and after six months it was 1.6 (0.8 to 3.2). Adjusted mean differences in the two QoL measures showed no significant differences between the study groups at six or 12 months after stroke onset. Conclusions: The NDT approach was not found effective in the care of stroke patients in the hospital setting. Health care professionals need to reconsider the use of this approach.
Cliënten met een CVA (cerebrovascular accident of beroerte) hebben verschillende voorkeuren m.b.t. de training van arm-hand vaardigheden (AHV). Adelante heeft de laatste jaren effectieve behandelconcepten voor deze training ontwikkeld die op de laatste inzichten omtrent neurorevalidatie en motorisch leren zijn gebaseerd. Door de korte revalidatieduur blijft de training vaak beperkt tot een gering aantal AHV, wat tot een suboptimale uitkomst leidt. Ergo- en fysiotherapeuten van Adelante willen cliënten vaker, intensiever en in meer realistische omgevingen laten trainen. Belangrijk is dat cliënten veilig zelfstandig kunnen oefenen en van feedback voorzien worden en dat de inhoud van de training t.o.v. huidige programma’s verrijkt wordt. Een nieuw revalidatieprotocol voor immersive Virtual Reality (VR)-ondersteunde AHV training zou hiervoor een oplossingsrichting kunnen zijn, maar er bestaan nog geen commercieel verkrijgbare producten die aan de eisen van professionals en cliënten voldoen. De ergo- en fysiotherapeuten verwachten dat de toepassing van VR binnen een AHV training efficiënter is, tot snellere en betere resultaten (o.a. door betere generaliseerbaarheid/ een betere transfer), en tot lagere behandelkosten leidt. De toevoeging van immersieve virtuele omgevingen die zo (gepersonaliseerd) aanpasbaar zijn dat de cliënt zoveel mogelijk en zelfstandig in de eigen leefomgeving kan oefenen en feedback krijgt, is innovatief voor de revalidatie. Om deze innovatie te kunnen realiseren, wordt in het beoogde project de volgende onderzoeksvraag beantwoord: “Hoe dient een immersieve VR-applicatie vormgegeven te worden om revalidanten met een CVA zo optimaal mogelijk te ondersteunen bij het trainen van AHV?” Het uitgangspunt hierbij is Design Thinking. In vijf fases (Empathising, Defining, Ideating, Prototyping en Testing, met diverse iteraties) worden in co-creatie met alle stakeholders immersieve virtuele omgevingen en geschikte hardware/ interfaces voor toepassing in AHV training ontwikkeld en inzicht verkregen in de meerwaarde, hanteerbaarheid en implementatie van VR bij revalidanten met problemen op het gebied van AHV als gevolg van een CVA.