Medication Self-Administration after Stroke (P5.181)

Conclusion: Stroke patients performed poorly on the HMS, and though performance improved after medication education, this may be related to spontaneous stroke recovery. MSA problems, assessed by HMS performance, may strongly predict post-acute care needs. Funded by: NJ Brain Injury Commission and Kessler FoundationDisclosure: Dr. Oyawusi has nothing to disclose. Dr. Levy has nothing to disclose. Dr. Gentile has nothing to disclose. Dr. March has nothing to disclose. Dr. Hreha has received personal compensation for activities with Kessler Institute for Rehabilitation. Dr. Pagaoa-Cruz has nothing to disclose. Dr. Masmela has nothing to disclose. Dr. Galletta has nothing to disclose. Dr. Holman has nothing to disclose. Dr. McKenna has nothing to disclose. Dr. Zhang has received personal compensation for activities with Takeda Global Development Center Americas, Inc. as an employee. Dr. Barrett has received personal compensation for activities with Medscape/emedicine. Dr. Barrett's institution has received research support from NIH, NIDRR, the Healthcare Foundation of NJ, the Mabel H. Flory Trust, the Wallerstein Foundation for Geria
Source: Neurology - Category: Neurology Authors: Tags: Neuro-rehabilitation: Stroke Source Type: research