RecoverNow: Feasibility of a Mobile Tablet-Based Rehabilitation Intervention to Treat Post-Stroke Communication Deficits in the Acute Care Setting

Approximately 40% of patients diagnosed with stroke experience some degree of aphasia. With limited health care resources, patients' access to speech and language therapies is often delayed. We propose using mobile-platform technology to initiate early speech-language therapy in the acute care...

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Veröffentlicht in:PloS one 2016-12, Vol.11 (12), p.e0167950-e0167950
Hauptverfasser: Mallet, Karen H, Shamloul, Rany M, Corbett, Dale, Finestone, Hillel M, Hatcher, Simon, Lumsden, Jim, Momoli, Franco, Shamy, Michel C F, Stotts, Grant, Swartz, Richard H, Yang, Christine, Dowlatshahi, Dar
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container_issue 12
container_start_page e0167950
container_title PloS one
container_volume 11
creator Mallet, Karen H
Shamloul, Rany M
Corbett, Dale
Finestone, Hillel M
Hatcher, Simon
Lumsden, Jim
Momoli, Franco
Shamy, Michel C F
Stotts, Grant
Swartz, Richard H
Yang, Christine
Dowlatshahi, Dar
description Approximately 40% of patients diagnosed with stroke experience some degree of aphasia. With limited health care resources, patients' access to speech and language therapies is often delayed. We propose using mobile-platform technology to initiate early speech-language therapy in the acute care setting. For this pilot, our objective was to assess the feasibility of a tablet-based speech-language therapy for patients with communication deficits following acute stroke. We enrolled consecutive patients admitted with a stroke and communication deficits with NIHSS score ≥1 on the best language and/or dysarthria parameters. We excluded patients with severe comprehension deficits where communication was not possible. Following baseline assessment by a speech-language pathologist (SLP), patients were provided with a mobile tablet programmed with individualized therapy applications based on the assessment, and instructed to use it for at least one hour per day. Our objective was to establish feasibility by measuring recruitment rate, adherence rate, retention rate, protocol deviations and acceptability. Over 6 months, 143 patients were admitted with a new diagnosis of stroke: 73 had communication deficits, 44 met inclusion criteria, and 30 were enrolled into RecoverNow (median age 62, 26.6% female) for a recruitment rate of 68% of eligible participants. Participants received mobile tablets at a mean 6.8 days from admission [SEM 1.6], and used them for a mean 149.8 minutes/day [SEM 19.1]. In-hospital retention rate was 97%, and 96% of patients scored the mobile tablet-based communication therapy as at least moderately convenient 3/5 or better with 5/5 being most "convenient". Individualized speech-language therapy delivered by mobile tablet technology is feasible in acute care.
doi_str_mv 10.1371/journal.pone.0167950
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With limited health care resources, patients' access to speech and language therapies is often delayed. We propose using mobile-platform technology to initiate early speech-language therapy in the acute care setting. For this pilot, our objective was to assess the feasibility of a tablet-based speech-language therapy for patients with communication deficits following acute stroke. We enrolled consecutive patients admitted with a stroke and communication deficits with NIHSS score ≥1 on the best language and/or dysarthria parameters. We excluded patients with severe comprehension deficits where communication was not possible. Following baseline assessment by a speech-language pathologist (SLP), patients were provided with a mobile tablet programmed with individualized therapy applications based on the assessment, and instructed to use it for at least one hour per day. Our objective was to establish feasibility by measuring recruitment rate, adherence rate, retention rate, protocol deviations and acceptability. Over 6 months, 143 patients were admitted with a new diagnosis of stroke: 73 had communication deficits, 44 met inclusion criteria, and 30 were enrolled into RecoverNow (median age 62, 26.6% female) for a recruitment rate of 68% of eligible participants. Participants received mobile tablets at a mean 6.8 days from admission [SEM 1.6], and used them for a mean 149.8 minutes/day [SEM 19.1]. In-hospital retention rate was 97%, and 96% of patients scored the mobile tablet-based communication therapy as at least moderately convenient 3/5 or better with 5/5 being most "convenient". Individualized speech-language therapy delivered by mobile tablet technology is feasible in acute care.</abstract><cop>United States</cop><pub>Public Library of Science</pub><pmid>28002479</pmid><doi>10.1371/journal.pone.0167950</doi><tpages>e0167950</tpages><orcidid>https://orcid.org/0000-0003-0222-2638</orcidid><oa>free_for_read</oa></addata></record>
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subjects Adult
Aged
Aged, 80 and over
Aphasia
Aphasia - etiology
Aphasia - rehabilitation
Biology and Life Sciences
Brain research
Care and treatment
Communication
Complications and side effects
Computers, Handheld
Consent
Critical Care
Demographic aspects
Feasibility Studies
Female
Health care
Hospitalization
Hospitals
Human communication
Humans
Intervention
Language
Language Therapy
Male
Medicine and Health Sciences
Methods
Middle Aged
Mobile communication systems
Outcome Assessment (Health Care)
Patient education
Patients
Prognosis
Recruitment
Rehabilitation
Retention
Social Sciences
Speech
Speech therapists
Speech therapy
Stroke
Stroke - complications
Stroke - diagnosis
Studies
Tablets
Technology
Therapy
title RecoverNow: Feasibility of a Mobile Tablet-Based Rehabilitation Intervention to Treat Post-Stroke Communication Deficits in the Acute Care Setting
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