Factors Associated With Participation in Life Situations for Adults With Stroke: A Systematic Review
Factors Associated With Participation in Life Situations for Adults With Stroke: A Systematic Review
Objectives
To identify biopsychosocial factors associated with participation outcomes for adults with stroke and to investigate factors associated with participation at different time points poststroke.
Data Sources
Medline, CINAHL, AMED, PyschINFO, and Web of Science were systematically searched using keywords stroke, participation, and outcomes and their synonyms on May 15, 2017.
Study Selection
Observational studies reporting on biopsychosocial factors and participation outcomes for community-dwelling adults with stroke were selected. Studies were eligible for inclusion if participation outcomes were measured using indices that mapped to the participation domain of the International Classification of Functioning, Disability and Health (ICF). Intervention studies were excluded. A second reviewer checked all studies against eligibility criteria at each stage.
Data Extraction
Data were extracted on any statistically determined association between biopsychosocial factors and participation outcomes.
Data Synthesis
The proportion of studies reporting significant associations with variables was classified according to the ICF. The exact binomial test was used to determine the probability that the proportion of studies reporting significant associations was due to chance alone. Qualitative descriptive summaries of each study allowed consideration of interactions between variables and changes in participation over time points.
Conclusions
Although depressive symptoms, cognitive functioning, and mobility were found to have the strongest associations with participation, we found that other frequently occurring factors (such as fatigue and environmental factors) were less extensively considered. The diversity of outcome measures encountered within the review highlight the need for a consensus on a core set of outcome measures to evaluate long-term participation in life situations poststroke.
945-955
Ezekiel, Leisle
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Collett, Johnny
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Mayo, Nancy E.
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Pang, Lori
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Field, Leanne
54871fa6-903f-45fc-b244-255c2f79d302
Dawes, Helen
4323ecf7-fbf7-4c65-95dc-24f906c34f39
1 May 2019
Ezekiel, Leisle
aee53f24-cd28-400e-85c1-95c8a9b21f2a
Collett, Johnny
302ee18b-6516-4994-9c4e-9976b4d6fc22
Mayo, Nancy E.
637dae5c-161b-4c8d-9684-2b858d46b639
Pang, Lori
9078b08f-742e-4597-8854-0e2be0ac157d
Field, Leanne
54871fa6-903f-45fc-b244-255c2f79d302
Dawes, Helen
4323ecf7-fbf7-4c65-95dc-24f906c34f39
Ezekiel, Leisle, Collett, Johnny, Mayo, Nancy E., Pang, Lori, Field, Leanne and Dawes, Helen
(2019)
Factors Associated With Participation in Life Situations for Adults With Stroke: A Systematic Review.
Archives of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, 100 (5), .
(doi:10.1016/j.apmr.2018.06.017).
Abstract
Objectives
To identify biopsychosocial factors associated with participation outcomes for adults with stroke and to investigate factors associated with participation at different time points poststroke.
Data Sources
Medline, CINAHL, AMED, PyschINFO, and Web of Science were systematically searched using keywords stroke, participation, and outcomes and their synonyms on May 15, 2017.
Study Selection
Observational studies reporting on biopsychosocial factors and participation outcomes for community-dwelling adults with stroke were selected. Studies were eligible for inclusion if participation outcomes were measured using indices that mapped to the participation domain of the International Classification of Functioning, Disability and Health (ICF). Intervention studies were excluded. A second reviewer checked all studies against eligibility criteria at each stage.
Data Extraction
Data were extracted on any statistically determined association between biopsychosocial factors and participation outcomes.
Data Synthesis
The proportion of studies reporting significant associations with variables was classified according to the ICF. The exact binomial test was used to determine the probability that the proportion of studies reporting significant associations was due to chance alone. Qualitative descriptive summaries of each study allowed consideration of interactions between variables and changes in participation over time points.
Conclusions
Although depressive symptoms, cognitive functioning, and mobility were found to have the strongest associations with participation, we found that other frequently occurring factors (such as fatigue and environmental factors) were less extensively considered. The diversity of outcome measures encountered within the review highlight the need for a consensus on a core set of outcome measures to evaluate long-term participation in life situations poststroke.
Text
Factors associated with participation in life situations for adults with stroke
- Accepted Manuscript
More information
Published date: 1 May 2019
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 454292
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/454292
ISSN: 0003-9993
PURE UUID: 84d5696f-0a3e-4830-854c-b7d7f4916dd6
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Date deposited: 07 Feb 2022 17:31
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 07:06
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Contributors
Author:
Leisle Ezekiel
Author:
Johnny Collett
Author:
Nancy E. Mayo
Author:
Lori Pang
Author:
Leanne Field
Author:
Helen Dawes
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