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Related Concept Videos

Documentation in Long-Term and Home Healthcare Setting01:29

Documentation in Long-Term and Home Healthcare Setting

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Restorative care is provided once a patient has been discharged from a healthcare facility and requires additional services. The additional services include home care, rehabilitation programs, and extended care. Restorative care centers help the patient regain their previous level of functioning or acquire a new level of functioning due to the incapacitating effects of a disease or a disability. It aims to assist patients in enhancing their quality of life by encouraging independence,...
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Nursing management for a patient with arteriosclerosis involves a comprehensive approach focusing on lifestyle modification, disease monitoring, education, and symptomatic care. Here is an overview of effective nursing strategies:Assessment and Monitoring: Initial and ongoing assessments are crucial. Nurses must document the patient's medical history, including any hypertension, diabetes, hyperlipidemia, and other cardiovascular diseases. Assessments also cover family history and lifestyle...
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Related Experiment Video

Updated: Jul 31, 2025

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Implementing Home-Based Clinical Research for Caregivers and Persons with Stroke: Lessons Learned.

Sarah Blanton, Sandra Dunbar, Sarah Caston

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    Conducting home-based stroke rehabilitation research requires careful planning. This study highlights challenges in recruitment, data collection, and adherence to therapies like constraint-induced movement therapy (CIMT) for improved upper extremity function.

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    Area of Science:

    • Rehabilitation research
    • Stroke recovery
    • Home-based interventions

    Background:

    • Home-based research presents unique challenges for participants, methods, and researchers.
    • Ensuring methodological rigor in home environments is crucial for study validity.
    • Carepartner engagement is vital for effective home-based rehabilitation interventions.

    Purpose of the Study:

    • To describe challenges and lessons learned from a pilot randomized controlled trial of a web-based intervention for stroke survivors and their carepartners.
    • To identify strategies for improving the planning and execution of future home-based rehabilitation research.
    • To enhance carepartner engagement in home-based activities to improve upper extremity function post-stroke.

    Main Methods:

    • A two-group, randomized pilot study (n=32) of the CARE-CITE (Carepartner and Constraint-Induced Therapy) web-based intervention.
    • Intervention focused on fostering carepartner engagement in home-based activities and adherence to constraint-induced movement therapy principles.
    • Data collection and intervention delivery occurred within the participants' home settings.

    Main Results:

    • Key challenges included participant recruitment, home-based data collection, adherence to constraint-induced movement therapy (wearing a mitt), tracking practice time, and participant-driven goal setting.
    • Other issues involved ensuring safety of practice activities and home visits, balancing autonomy support, addressing participant needs beyond the study scope, and ethical considerations for depressive symptoms.
    • Successful implementation required strategies to support methodological rigor and facilitate carepartner involvement.

    Conclusions:

    • Home-based rehabilitation research, particularly interventions like CARE-CITE, faces multifaceted challenges.
    • Addressing recruitment, adherence, safety, and ethical considerations is essential for successful home-based studies.
    • Strategies for supporting carepartners and ensuring methodological rigor can facilitate effective home-based rehabilitation research for stroke survivors.