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Development of strategies to support home-based exercise adherence after stroke: A Delphi consensus

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posted on 2025-05-09, 19:12 authored by Amreen Mahmood, Anagha Deshmukh, Harpreet Sachdev, Sundar Kumar Veluswamy, Suruliraj Karthikbabu, B. Unnikrishnan, Coralie EnglishCoralie English, John M. Solomon, Manikandan Natarajan, Dianne MarsdenDianne Marsden, Glade Vyslysel, Sebastian Padickaparambil, Swetha Ts, Artur Direito, Senthil Kumaran, Girish N
OBJECTIVE: To develop a set of strategies to enhance adherence to home-based exercises after stroke, and an overarching framework to classify these strategies. METHOD: We conducted a four-round Delphi consensus (two online surveys, followed by a focus group then a consensus round). The Delphi panel consisted of 13 experts from physiotherapy, occupational therapy, clinical psychology, behaviour science and community medicine. The experts were from India, Australia and UK. RESULTS: In round 1, a 10-item survey using open-ended questions was emailed to panel members and 75 strategies were generated. Of these, 25 strategies were included in round 2 for further consideration. A total of 64 strategies were finally included in the subsequent rounds. In round 3, the strategies were categorised into nine domains-(1) patient education on stroke and recovery, (2) method of exercise prescription, (3) feedback and supervision, (4) cognitive remediation, (5) involvement of family members, (6) involvement of society, (7) promoting self-efficacy, (8) motivational strategies and (9) reminder strategies. The consensus from 12 experts (93%) led to the development of the framework in round 4. CONCLUSION: We developed a framework of comprehensive strategies to assist clinicians in supporting exercise adherence among stroke survivors. It provides practical methods that can be deployed in both research and clinical practices. Future studies should explore stakeholders' experiences and the cost-effectiveness of implementing these strategies.

History

Journal title

BMJ Open

Volume

12

Issue

1

Article number

e055946

Publisher

BMJ Group

Language

  • en, English

College/Research Centre

College of Health, Medicine and Wellbeing

School

School of Health Sciences

Rights statement

© Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2022. Re-use permitted under CC BY-NC. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ.

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