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Source: Disability and Rehabilitation
Education: Patient Communication

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Total 3 results found since Jan 2013.

Exploring patient perspectives of barriers and facilitators to participating in hospital-based stroke rehabilitation.
DISCUSSION: Personalized rehabilitation can be considered in comparison to person-centred care principles. The barriers and enablers experienced by patients in this study contribute to the existing knowledge of the patient experience of stroke rehabilitation and may be used to inform clinical practices and future research. Implications for Rehabilitation The surrounding environments can facilitate participation in rehabilitation using strategies to reduce noise and disruption and also by encouraging social interactions among patients. Increasing the frequency and consistency of communication with patients about rehabilitat...
Source: Disability and Rehabilitation - February 11, 2021 Category: Rehabilitation Authors: Last N, Packham TL, Gewurtz RE, Letts LJ, Harris JE Tags: Disabil Rehabil Source Type: research

Creating therapeutic relationships through communication: a qualitative metasynthesis from the perspectives of people with communication impairment after stroke.
CONCLUSIONS: A therapeutic relationship develops, at least in part, in response to the clinician's communication and how this is received and experienced by the patient. Understanding the characteristics of relationship-fostering communication and knowing how communication influences relationships can help clinicians critically reflect on their communication and better develop therapeutic relationships with people with communication impairment. IMPLICATIONS FOR REHABILITATION Practitioner-patient communication can facilitate therapeutic relationships or create therapeutic disconnections. Communication patterns that are com...
Source: Disability and Rehabilitation - November 23, 2020 Category: Rehabilitation Authors: Bright FAS, Reeves B Tags: Disabil Rehabil Source Type: research

"Living in a foreign country": experiences of staff-patient communication in inpatient stroke settings for people with post-stroke aphasia and those supporting them.
CONCLUSIONS: Communication was viewed as important but challenging by all three groups. To maximise staff-patient interactions in the future, attention needs to be paid to: the psychosocial needs of stroke survivors and their carers, ongoing staff training and support for the healthcare professionals supporting them, and the provision of an aphasia-friendly and a communicatively stimulating ward environment. Implications for Rehabilitation Effective staff-patient communication is viewed as fundamental to stroke rehabilitation but challenging by patients with aphasia, their carers and the healthcare professionals supporting...
Source: Disability and Rehabilitation - September 27, 2018 Category: Rehabilitation Authors: Clancy L, Povey R, Rodham K Tags: Disabil Rehabil Source Type: research