4.5 Article

Economic analysis of the 'Take Charge' intervention for people following stroke: Results from a randomised trial

Related references

Note: Only part of the references are listed.
Article Rehabilitation

The effect of the Take Charge intervention on mood, motivation, activation and risk factor management: Analysis of secondary data from the Taking Charge after Stroke (TaCAS) trial

Harry McNaughton et al.

Summary: The self-directed Take Charge intervention for rehabilitation after stroke may modify participants' motivation, mastery, and connectedness, although the specific mechanism remains uncertain. The study found that there was a significant positive association between baseline AMP-C scores and 12-month outcomes for the control group, but not for the combined Take Charge groups.

CLINICAL REHABILITATION (2021)

Article Rehabilitation

Setting meaningful goals in rehabilitation: rationale and practical tool

Joost Dekker et al.

CLINICAL REHABILITATION (2020)

Article Medicine, General & Internal

The cost of providing mechanical thrombectomy in the UK NHS: a micro-costing study

Joyce S. Balami et al.

CLINICAL MEDICINE (2020)

Article Economics

Valuing health-related quality of life: An EQ-5D-5L value set for England

Nancy J. Devlin et al.

HEALTH ECONOMICS (2018)

Editorial Material Clinical Neurology

The ATTEND trial: An alternative explanation with implications for future recovery and rehabilitation clinical trials

Carolee Winstein

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF STROKE (2018)

Review Health Care Sciences & Services

Cost-effectiveness thresholds: methods for setting and examples from around the world

Andre Soares Santos et al.

EXPERT REVIEW OF PHARMACOECONOMICS & OUTCOMES RESEARCH (2018)