Improving quality of life by increasing outings after stroke: Study protocol for the Out-and-About trial
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Open Access
Type
ArticleAuthor/s
McCluskey, AnnieAda, Louise
Middleton, Sandy
Kelly, PJ
Goodall, Stephen
Grimshaw, Jeremy M
Logan, Pip
Longworth, Mark
Karageorge, Aspasia
Abstract
Almost one third of Australians need help to travel outdoors after a stroke. Ambulation training and escorted outings are recommended as best practice in Australian clinical guidelines for stroke. Yet fewer than 20% of people with stroke receive enough of these sessions in their ...
See moreAlmost one third of Australians need help to travel outdoors after a stroke. Ambulation training and escorted outings are recommended as best practice in Australian clinical guidelines for stroke. Yet fewer than 20% of people with stroke receive enough of these sessions in their local community to change outcomes. The Out-And-About trial aims to determine the efficacy and cost-effectiveness of an implementation program to change team behaviour and increase outings by people with stroke. A two-group cluster-randomised trial will be conducted using concealed allocation, blinded assessors and intention-to-treat analysis. Twenty community teams and their stroke clients (n=300) will be recruited. Teams will be randomized to receive either the Out-And-About program or written guidelines only. The primary outcome is the proportion of people with stroke receiving multiple escorted outings during therapy sessions, measured at baseline and 13 months post-intervention. Secondary outcomes include number of outings and distance travelled, measured using a self report diary at baseline and six months post-baseline, and a global positioning system (GPS) after six months. Cost-effectiveness will measure quality-adjusted life years and health service use, measured at baseline and six months post-baseline. A potential outcome of this study will be evidence for a costed, transferable implementation program. If successful, the program will have international relevance and transferability. Another potential outcome will be validation of a novel and objective method of measuring outdoor travel (GPS) to supplement self-report methods. This trial is registered with the Australian New Zealand Clinical Trials Registry (ACTRN12611000554965)
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See moreAlmost one third of Australians need help to travel outdoors after a stroke. Ambulation training and escorted outings are recommended as best practice in Australian clinical guidelines for stroke. Yet fewer than 20% of people with stroke receive enough of these sessions in their local community to change outcomes. The Out-And-About trial aims to determine the efficacy and cost-effectiveness of an implementation program to change team behaviour and increase outings by people with stroke. A two-group cluster-randomised trial will be conducted using concealed allocation, blinded assessors and intention-to-treat analysis. Twenty community teams and their stroke clients (n=300) will be recruited. Teams will be randomized to receive either the Out-And-About program or written guidelines only. The primary outcome is the proportion of people with stroke receiving multiple escorted outings during therapy sessions, measured at baseline and 13 months post-intervention. Secondary outcomes include number of outings and distance travelled, measured using a self report diary at baseline and six months post-baseline, and a global positioning system (GPS) after six months. Cost-effectiveness will measure quality-adjusted life years and health service use, measured at baseline and six months post-baseline. A potential outcome of this study will be evidence for a costed, transferable implementation program. If successful, the program will have international relevance and transferability. Another potential outcome will be validation of a novel and objective method of measuring outdoor travel (GPS) to supplement self-report methods. This trial is registered with the Australian New Zealand Clinical Trials Registry (ACTRN12611000554965)
See less
Date
2013-01-01Publisher
International Journal of StrokeCitation
McCluskey A., Ada L., Middleton S., Kelly P.J., Goodall S., Grimshaw J.M., Logan P., Longworth M., Karageorge A. (2013) Improving quality of life by increasing outings after stroke: Study protocol for the Out-and-About trial. International Journal of Stroke, 8 (1):54 – 58.Share