Florey Department of Neuroscience and Mental Health - Research Publications

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    The personal and social experiences of community-dwelling younger adults after stroke in Australia: a qualitative interview study
    Shipley, J ; Luker, J ; Thijs, V ; Bernhardt, J (BMJ PUBLISHING GROUP, 2018-12)
    OBJECTIVES: To examine the personal and social experiences of younger adults after stroke. DESIGN: Qualitative study design involving in-depth semi-structured interviews and rigorous qualitative descriptive analysis informed by social constructionism. PARTICIPANTS: Nineteen younger stroke survivors aged 18 to 55 years at the time of their first-ever stroke. SETTING: Participants were recruited from urban and rural settings across Australia. Interviews took place in a clinic room of the Florey Institute of Neuroscience and Mental Health (Melbourne, Australia), over an online conference platform or by telephone. RESULTS: Four main themes emerged from the discourses: (1) psycho-emotional experiences after young stroke; (2) losing pre-stroke life construct and relationships; (3) recovering and adapting after young stroke; and (4) invalidated by the old-age, physical concept of stroke. While these themes ran through the narratives of all participants, data analysis also drew out interesting variation between individual experiences. CONCLUSIONS: For many younger adults, stroke is an unexpected and devastating life event that profoundly diverts their biography and presents complex and continued challenges to fulfilling age-normative roles. While adaptation, resilience and post-traumatic growth are common, this study suggests that more bespoke support is needed for younger adults after stroke. Increasing public awareness of young stroke is also important, as is increased research attention to this problem.
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    A systematic review protocol of timing, efficacy and cost effectiveness of upper limb therapy for motor recovery post-stroke
    Hayward, KS ; Kramer, SF ; Thijs, V ; Ratcliffe, J ; Ward, NS ; Churilov, L ; Jolliffe, L ; Corbett, D ; Cloud, G ; Kaffenberger, T ; Brodtmann, A ; Bernhardt, J ; Lannin, NA (BMC, 2019-07-25)
    BACKGROUND: Improving upper limb (UL) motor recovery after stroke represents a major clinical and scientific goal. We aim to complete three systematic reviews to estimate the (1) association between time to start of UL therapy and motor recovery, (2) relative efficacy of different UL therapy approaches post-stroke and (3) cost-effectiveness of UL therapy interventions. METHODS: We have designed a systematic review protocol to address three systematic review questions that were each registered with PROSPERO. The search will be conducted in MEDLINE, EMBASE, and Cochrane Controlled Register of Trials. We will include randomised controlled trials, non-randomised clinical trials, before-after studies and observational studies of adult stroke survivors with an average stroke onset < 6 months, undergoing hospital-based therapy to improve UL function. Eligible interventions will aim to promote UL functional recovery. Two reviewers will independently screen, select and extract data. Study risk of bias will be appraised using appropriate tools. Clinical measures of motor recovery will be investigated (primary measure Fugl Meyer UL assessment), as well as measures of health-related quality of life (primary measure EQ-5D) and all cost-effectiveness analyses completed. Secondary outcomes include therapy dose (minutes, weeks, repetitions as available) and safety (i.e. adverse events, serious adverse events). A narrative synthesis will describe quality and content of the evidence. If feasible, we will conduct random effects meta-analyses where appropriate. DISCUSSION: We anticipate the findings of this review will increase our understanding of UL therapy and inform the generation of novel, data-driven hypotheses for future UL therapy research post-stroke. SYSTEMATIC REVIEW REGISTRATION: PROSPERO, http://www.crd.york.ac.uk/PROSPERO/display_record.php?ID=CRD42018019367, http://www.crd.york.ac.uk/PROSPERO/display_record.php?ID=CRD42018111629, http://www.crd.york.ac.uk/PROSPERO/display_record.php?ID=CRD42018111628.
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    The unmet needs of young stroke survivors
    Sapuppo, D ; Thijs, V ; Bernhardt, J (SAGE PUBLICATIONS LTD, 2018-08)
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    What is it like to have a stroke in younger age? A qualitative study on the young stroke experience
    Shipley, J ; Luker, J ; Thijs, V ; Bernhardt, J (SAGE PUBLICATIONS LTD, 2018-08)