Coaching stroke survivors to persevere with practice: An observational behavioural mapping study
To quantitatively describe therapists' use of coaching with stroke survivors, in a hospital-based rehabilitation setting, to promote perseverance with longer-term practice. Prospective observational behavioural mapping study. Rehabilitation unit of a regional public hospital in Queensland, Aust...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Clinical rehabilitation 2024-12, p.2692155241304340 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | To quantitatively describe therapists' use of coaching with stroke survivors, in a hospital-based rehabilitation setting, to promote perseverance with longer-term practice.
Prospective observational behavioural mapping study.
Rehabilitation unit of a regional public hospital in Queensland, Australia.
A custom-designed behavioural mapping tool was used to collect rehabilitation session contextual data and therapists' use of coaching. Data were captured in 3-minute epochs for a maximum of 30 minutes. Data were analysed using descriptive statistics.
Thirty-six rehabilitation sessions, including 34 participants (therapists
= 22, stroke survivors
= 12) were observed. Rehabilitation sessions were mostly inpatient (
= 33, 91.7%), one-on-one (
= 30, 83.3%), and conducted in the physiotherapy (
= 160, 45.5%) or occupational therapy (
= 155, 44.0%) gym. Strategies to promote perseverance were used in 76.7% (
= 267) of observed epochs. The most frequently used strategy was
and the least frequently used strategy was
Coaching that may promote perseverance with practice was regularly used by therapists during hospital-based rehabilitation sessions. Coaching that may enable longer-term perseverance beyond a therapist-dependent rehabilitation model was less commonly observed. |
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ISSN: | 0269-2155 1477-0873 1477-0873 |
DOI: | 10.1177/02692155241304340 |