TY - JOUR AU - Yan L. AU - Lindley R. AU - Zhang Y. AU - Zhou B. AU - Anderson Craig AU - Zhang J. AU - Li X. AU - Luo R. AU - Shi J. AU - Zhao Y. AU - Liu X. AU - Lamb S. AU - Wu Y. AU - Chen S. AU - Xie B. AU - Wang N. AU - Peoples N. AU - Bettger J. AB -

RATIONALE: Stroke is the leading cause of death and disability in rural China. For stroke patients residing in resource-limited rural areas, secondary prevention and rehabilitation are largely unavailable, and where present, are far below evidence-based standards. AIM: This study aims to develop and implement a simplified stroke rehabilitation program that utilizes nurses and family caregivers for service delivery, and evaluate its feasibility and effectiveness in rural China. METHODS AND DESIGN: This 2-year randomized controlled trial is being conducted in 2-3 county hospitals located in northwest, northeast, and southwest China. Eligible and consenting stroke inpatients (200 in total) have been recruited and randomized into either a control or intervention group. Nurses in the county hospital are trained by rehabilitation specialists and in turn train the family caregivers in the intervention group. They also provide telephone follow-up care three times post discharge. The recruitment, baseline, intervention, follow-up care, and evaluation are guided by the RECOVER mobile phone app specifically designed for this study. STUDY OUTCOME: The primary outcome is patients' Barthel Index (activities of daily living: mobility, self-care, and toileting) at 6 months. Process and economic evaluation will also be conducted. DISCUSSION: The results of our study will generate initial high-quality evidence to improve stroke care in resource-scarce settings. If proven effective, this innovative care delivery model has the potential to improve the health and function of stroke patients, relieve caregiver burden, guide policy-making, and advance translational research in the field of stroke care.

AD - Global Health Institute, Duke University, Durham, USA Global Health Research Center, Duke Kunshan University, Kunshan, China The George Institute for Global Health at Peking University Health Science Center, Beijing, China lijing.yan@duke.edu sjp562013@163.com.
Global Health Research Center, Duke Kunshan University, Kunshan, China.
Department of Clinical Epidemiology, China Medical University, Shenyang, China.
The George Institute for Global Health at Peking University Health Science Center, Beijing, China.
Department of Rehabilitation Medicine, Peking University First Hospital, Beijing, China.
The George Institute for Global Health, Sydney, Australia.
School of Public Health, Ningxia Medical University, Yinchuan, China.
Southern Nazarene University, Bethany, OK, USA.
Global Health Institute, Duke University, Durham, USA School of Nursing, Duke Clinical Research Institute, Duke University, Durham, USA.
Oxford Clinical Trials Research Unit, University of Oxford, Oxford, UK.
The George Institute for Global Health at Peking University Health Science Center, Beijing, China Peking University Clinical Research Institute, Beijing, China. AN - 27462096 BT - International Journal of Stroke CN - [IF]: 3.833 DP - NLM ET - 2016/07/28 LA - Eng LB - CHINA
AUS
FY17
NMH
PROF N1 - Yan, Lijing L
Chen, Shu
Zhou, Bo
Zhang, Jing
Xie, Bin
Luo, Rong
Wang, Ninghua
Lindley, Richard
Zhang, Yuhong
Zhao, Yi
Li, Xian
Liu, Xiao
Peoples, Nicholas
Bettger, Janet Prvu
Anderson, Craig
Lamb, Sarah E
Wu, Yangfeng
Shi, Jingpu
Int J Stroke. 2016 Jul 26. pii: 1747493016654290. N2 -

RATIONALE: Stroke is the leading cause of death and disability in rural China. For stroke patients residing in resource-limited rural areas, secondary prevention and rehabilitation are largely unavailable, and where present, are far below evidence-based standards. AIM: This study aims to develop and implement a simplified stroke rehabilitation program that utilizes nurses and family caregivers for service delivery, and evaluate its feasibility and effectiveness in rural China. METHODS AND DESIGN: This 2-year randomized controlled trial is being conducted in 2-3 county hospitals located in northwest, northeast, and southwest China. Eligible and consenting stroke inpatients (200 in total) have been recruited and randomized into either a control or intervention group. Nurses in the county hospital are trained by rehabilitation specialists and in turn train the family caregivers in the intervention group. They also provide telephone follow-up care three times post discharge. The recruitment, baseline, intervention, follow-up care, and evaluation are guided by the RECOVER mobile phone app specifically designed for this study. STUDY OUTCOME: The primary outcome is patients' Barthel Index (activities of daily living: mobility, self-care, and toileting) at 6 months. Process and economic evaluation will also be conducted. DISCUSSION: The results of our study will generate initial high-quality evidence to improve stroke care in resource-scarce settings. If proven effective, this innovative care delivery model has the potential to improve the health and function of stroke patients, relieve caregiver burden, guide policy-making, and advance translational research in the field of stroke care.

PY - 2016 SN - 1747-4949 (Electronic)
1747-4930 (Linking) T2 - International Journal of Stroke TI - A randomized controlled trial on rehabilitation through caregiver-delivered nurse-organized service programs for disabled stroke patients in rural china (the RECOVER trial): design and rationale Y2 - FY17 ER -