Feasibility of a Self-directed Upper Extremity Training Program to Promote Actual Arm Use for Individuals Living in the Community With Chronic Stroke

IF 1.9 Q2 REHABILITATION
Grace J. Kim PhD , Amanda Gahlot MS , Camile Magsombol OTD , Margaret Waskiewicz OTD , Nettie Capasso MS , Stephen Van Lew PhD , Hayejin Kim MS , Avinash Parnandi PhD , Victoria Vaughan Dickson PhD , Yael Goverover PhD
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Abstract

Objective

To determine the feasibility of a self-directed training protocol to promote actual arm use in everyday life. The secondary aim was to explore the initial efficacy on upper extremity (UE) outcome measures.

Design

Feasibility study using multiple methods.

Setting

Home and outpatient research lab.

Participants

Fifteen adults (6 women, 9 men, mean age=53.08 years) with chronic stroke living in the community. There was wide range of UE functional levels, ranging from dependent stabilizer (limited function) to functional assist (high function).

Intervention

Use My Arm-Remote protocol. Phase 1 consisted of clinician training on motivational interviewing (MI). Phase 2 consisted of MI sessions with participants to determine participant generated goals, training activities, and training schedules. Phase 3 consisted of UE task-oriented training (60 minutes/day, 5 days/week, for 4 weeks). Participants received daily surveys through an app to monitor arm training behavior and weekly virtual check-ins with clinicians to problem-solve challenges and adjust treatment plans.

Outcome Measures

Primary outcome measures were feasibility domains after intervention, measured by quantitative study data and qualitative semi-structured interviews. Secondary outcomes included the Canadian Occupational Performance Measure (COPM), Motor Activity Log (MAL), Fugl-Meyer Assessment (FMA), and accelerometry-based duration of use metric measured at baseline, discharge, and 4-week follow-up.

Results

The UMA-R was feasible in the following domains: recruitment rate, retention rate, intervention acceptance, intervention delivery, adherence frequency, and safety. Adherence to duration of daily practice did not meet our criteria. Improvements in UE outcomes were achieved at discharge and maintained at follow-up as measured by COPM-Performance subscale (F[1.42, 19.83]=17.72, P<.001) and COPM-Satisfaction subscale (F[2, 28]=14.73, P<.001), MAL (F[1.31, 18.30]=12.05, P<.01) and the FMA (F[2, 28]=16.62, P<.001).

Conclusion

The UMA-R was feasible and safe to implement for individuals living in the community with chronic stroke. Adherence duration was identified as area of refinement. Participants demonstrated improvements in standardized UE outcomes to support initial efficacy of the UMA-R. Shared decision-making and behavior change frameworks can support the implementation of UE self-directed rehabilitation. Our results warrant the refinement and further testing of the UMA-R.

通过自主上肢训练计划促进社区慢性中风患者实际使用手臂的可行性
目的确定在日常生活中促进实际手臂使用的自我指导训练方案的可行性。设计采用多种方法进行可行性研究。环境家庭和门诊研究实验室。参与者15名生活在社区的慢性中风成人(6名女性,9名男性,平均年龄=53.08岁)。干预措施 "使用我的手臂-远程 "方案。第一阶段包括对临床医生进行动机访谈(MI)培训。第 2 阶段包括与参与者进行动机访谈(MI),以确定参与者产生的目标、训练活动和训练时间表。第 3 阶段包括面向任务的 UE 培训(每天 60 分钟,每周 5 天,为期 4 周)。参与者每天通过应用程序接受调查,以监测手臂训练行为,每周与临床医生进行虚拟检查,以解决问题和调整治疗计划。结果测量主要结果测量干预后的可行性领域,通过定量研究数据和定性半结构化访谈进行测量。次要结果包括加拿大职业表现测量(COPM)、运动活动日志(MAL)、Fugl-Meyer 评估(FMA),以及在基线、出院和 4 周随访时测量的基于加速度计的使用时长指标。结果UMA-R 在以下方面是可行的:招募率、保留率、干预接受度、干预实施、坚持频率和安全性。坚持每天练习的时间不符合我们的标准。通过 COPM-表现分量表(F[1.42, 19.83]=17.72, P<.001)和 COPM-满意度分量表(F[2, 28]=14.结论对于生活在社区的慢性中风患者来说,UMA-R 是可行且安全的。坚持时间被认为是需要改进的地方。参与者在标准化无障碍环境结果方面的改善证明了 UMA-R 的初步有效性。共同决策和行为改变框架可以支持实施自主参与康复。我们的研究结果证明了 UMA-R 的改进和进一步测试是有必要的。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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CiteScore
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