Self-management: challenges for allied healthcare professionals in stroke rehabilitation - a focus group study.

Conclusion: Professional perceptions and beliefs are important factors to take into account when implementing stroke self-management programmes. Before professionals can enable stroke survivors to self-manage, they first need support in acquiring knowledge and skills regarding post-stroke self-management. Moreover, professionals could benefit from behavioural change models, and professionals recognised that stroke self-management interventions would be most beneficial when delivered post-discharge at people's homes. Implications for Rehabilitation Post-stroke self-management is a learning process with different levels dependent on pre-stroke lifestyle and self-management skills, the post-stroke phase of recovery, the cognitive abilities of stroke survivors and the support of caregivers (co-management). Persons with cognitive impairments are not persons who cannot learn to self-manage; rather, they need more specific self-management support. Case studies describing the abilities of stroke survivors, who are successful in self-management post-stroke, can help to develop "ability oriented" stroke-illness scripts. Addressing "ability oriented" stroke-illness scripts in bachelor and post-graduate education will enhance positive professional beliefs concerning the self-management post-stroke, and will help professionals in coaching in stroke survivors' goal setting in self-management programmes. Professionals' account suggests that stroke self-management programmes should also be d...
Source: Disability and Rehabilitation - Category: Rehabilitation Authors: Tags: Disabil Rehabil Source Type: research