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. 2020 Feb;29(2):104462.
doi: 10.1016/j.jstrokecerebrovasdis.2019.104462. Epub 2019 Nov 22.

Unmet Needs of US Acute Stroke Survivors Enrolled in a Transitional Care Intervention Trial

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Unmet Needs of US Acute Stroke Survivors Enrolled in a Transitional Care Intervention Trial

Anne K Hughes et al. J Stroke Cerebrovasc Dis. 2020 Feb.

Erratum in

Abstract

Background: Needs of patients that go unmet after a stroke can compromise the speed and extent of recovery. While unmet needs in long-term survivors has been studied, less is known about the unmet needs of acute stroke survivors. We examine unmet needs in the immediate postdischarge period among 160 participants in the (blinded for review) a transitional care intervention conducted in (blinded for review [1 US state]) during 2016 and 2017.

Methods: Bivariate and multivariate analyses using Poisson models were used to examine the relationship between total number of unmet needs and demographics, stroke type and severity, stroke effects, and stroke risk factors.

Results: The mean number of unmet needs was 4.55; number of unmet needs ranged from 2 to9; all participants had some unmet need. The most common unmet needs were stroke education (73.8%), financial (33.8%), and health-related (29.4%). In the final multivariate model income and education were inversely associated with number of unmet needs. As total number of stroke effects increased, so did number of unmet needs. Demographic variables (age, gender, and race), stroke risk factors, stroke type, and stroke severity were not statistically significantly associated with the number of unmet needs.

Conclusions: These results identify that in the acute post discharge period stroke survivors have many unmet needs that range from physical to psychosocial. Targeting interventions to those with the potential for greater numbers of unmet needs might be a salient clinical approach to improving stroke recovery and rehabilitation.

Keywords: Acute recovery; care transitions; financial; psychosocial; stroke education.

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