Mobile tablet-based therapies following stroke: a systematic scoping review protocol of attempted interventions and the challenges encountered

Abstract Background Stroke is a growing global epidemic limiting the ability of millions to function independently due to post-stroke deficits and complications. Although specialized stroke rehabilitation improves the recovery of functional abilities, accessing rehabilitation services has become inc...

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Main Authors: Michael Pugliese, Dylan Johnson, Dar Dowlatshahi, Tim Ramsay
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2017-11-01
Series:Systematic Reviews
Subjects:
CVA
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13643-017-0620-6
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spelling doaj-ac9968cc6ee44a5590b534a1112981e92020-11-24T21:18:32ZengBMCSystematic Reviews2046-40532017-11-01611710.1186/s13643-017-0620-6Mobile tablet-based therapies following stroke: a systematic scoping review protocol of attempted interventions and the challenges encounteredMichael Pugliese0Dylan Johnson1Dar Dowlatshahi2Tim Ramsay3School of Epidemiology, Public Health, and Preventive Medicine, University of OttawaSchool of Epidemiology, Public Health, and Preventive Medicine, University of OttawaDepartment of Medicine (Neurology), University of Ottawa Brain and Mind Research Institute, and Ottawa Hospital Research InstituteOttawa Hospital Research Institute and Scientific Director at the Ottawa Methods Centre, University of OttawaAbstract Background Stroke is a growing global epidemic limiting the ability of millions to function independently due to post-stroke deficits and complications. Although specialized stroke rehabilitation improves the recovery of functional abilities, accessing rehabilitation services has become increasingly challenging as the number of stroke survivors continues to increase and rehabilitation resources remain scarce. Mobile tablet-based therapies (MTBTs) may be a resource-efficient platform for providing stroke rehabilitation services. The feasibility and challenges of offering MTBTs to stroke survivors should be well understood before expensive, large-scale clinical trials are undertaken to study treatment efficacy. Method A systematic scoping review will be conducted to describe attempted MTBTs following stroke and the challenges encountered by survivors and study staff. Studies of interest will evaluate MTBTs offered to adult stroke patients in response to post-stroke complications or deficits. Journal databases, gray literature sources, clinical trial registries, relevant organizational websites, and reference lists of eligible studies will be searched to identify suitable studies. Study characteristics, barriers to care, methodological challenges, patient-reported outcomes, and health outcomes will be extracted to describe MTBTs and understand the challenges encountered in context. Results will be presented using descriptive statistics, tables, figures, and narrative description to summarize the scope of the field. Discussion Trends in MTBT feasibility and common challenges will be discussed to summarize major findings and highlight research gaps. Solutions to common challenges experienced by intervention participants and study staff will be proposed. Implications for the conduct of randomized clinical trials of MTBT efficacy and the appropriateness of a systematic review and meta-analysis of completed trials will be discussed. Systematic review registration uO Research ( http://hdl.handle.net/10393/35696 ).http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13643-017-0620-6Stroke rehabilitationmHealthiPadTablet computerCVADisability
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Michael Pugliese
Dylan Johnson
Dar Dowlatshahi
Tim Ramsay
spellingShingle Michael Pugliese
Dylan Johnson
Dar Dowlatshahi
Tim Ramsay
Mobile tablet-based therapies following stroke: a systematic scoping review protocol of attempted interventions and the challenges encountered
Systematic Reviews
Stroke rehabilitation
mHealth
iPad
Tablet computer
CVA
Disability
author_facet Michael Pugliese
Dylan Johnson
Dar Dowlatshahi
Tim Ramsay
author_sort Michael Pugliese
title Mobile tablet-based therapies following stroke: a systematic scoping review protocol of attempted interventions and the challenges encountered
title_short Mobile tablet-based therapies following stroke: a systematic scoping review protocol of attempted interventions and the challenges encountered
title_full Mobile tablet-based therapies following stroke: a systematic scoping review protocol of attempted interventions and the challenges encountered
title_fullStr Mobile tablet-based therapies following stroke: a systematic scoping review protocol of attempted interventions and the challenges encountered
title_full_unstemmed Mobile tablet-based therapies following stroke: a systematic scoping review protocol of attempted interventions and the challenges encountered
title_sort mobile tablet-based therapies following stroke: a systematic scoping review protocol of attempted interventions and the challenges encountered
publisher BMC
series Systematic Reviews
issn 2046-4053
publishDate 2017-11-01
description Abstract Background Stroke is a growing global epidemic limiting the ability of millions to function independently due to post-stroke deficits and complications. Although specialized stroke rehabilitation improves the recovery of functional abilities, accessing rehabilitation services has become increasingly challenging as the number of stroke survivors continues to increase and rehabilitation resources remain scarce. Mobile tablet-based therapies (MTBTs) may be a resource-efficient platform for providing stroke rehabilitation services. The feasibility and challenges of offering MTBTs to stroke survivors should be well understood before expensive, large-scale clinical trials are undertaken to study treatment efficacy. Method A systematic scoping review will be conducted to describe attempted MTBTs following stroke and the challenges encountered by survivors and study staff. Studies of interest will evaluate MTBTs offered to adult stroke patients in response to post-stroke complications or deficits. Journal databases, gray literature sources, clinical trial registries, relevant organizational websites, and reference lists of eligible studies will be searched to identify suitable studies. Study characteristics, barriers to care, methodological challenges, patient-reported outcomes, and health outcomes will be extracted to describe MTBTs and understand the challenges encountered in context. Results will be presented using descriptive statistics, tables, figures, and narrative description to summarize the scope of the field. Discussion Trends in MTBT feasibility and common challenges will be discussed to summarize major findings and highlight research gaps. Solutions to common challenges experienced by intervention participants and study staff will be proposed. Implications for the conduct of randomized clinical trials of MTBT efficacy and the appropriateness of a systematic review and meta-analysis of completed trials will be discussed. Systematic review registration uO Research ( http://hdl.handle.net/10393/35696 ).
topic Stroke rehabilitation
mHealth
iPad
Tablet computer
CVA
Disability
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13643-017-0620-6
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