4.4 Article

Self-evaluation of personal needs by community-living young stroke survivors using an online English language questionnaire

Journal

DISABILITY AND REHABILITATION
Volume 45, Issue 11, Pages 1830-1835

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/09638288.2022.2076935

Keywords

Stroke; young stroke; needs; questionnaire; impairment; social participation; finance

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This study aimed to identify the factors, burden, and significance of unmet needs in young community-living stroke survivors. The results indicated a high burden of unmet needs in domains such as impairments from stroke, finances, and social participation.
Background Identifying personal needs of young stroke survivors is crucial for their recovery. Purpose Identify factors, burden, and significance of unmet needs of young community-living stroke survivors. Materials and methods We used online advertising and word-of-mouth snowballing to recruit participants for an English language online questionnaire constructed for this purpose. Eligible participants aged 18-55 at time of stroke. Needs were classified into seven domains: Healthcare Experience, Impairments from Stroke, Everyday Activities, Work/Study, Finances, Relationships, and Social Participation. Random-effects logistic regression was used to determine the probability of unmet needs and X-2 test to determine significance of distribution across domains. Results Out of 137 responses recorded: 32 did not meet inclusion criteria, 29 duplicates identified were discarded, and 76 eligible participants were analysed. Respondents were median 37 (IQR 32-47) years at time of stroke, and median 3 (1-5) years since stroke. Fifty-eight (76%) females. Modified Rankin Scale median score of 1 (1-3). Of 48 identified potential needs, 25 (IQR 19-30) were rated unmet. Twenty (IQR 15-25) considered of high significance. Unmet needs most frequently occurred in the domains: Impairments from Stroke, Finances, and Social Participation. Conclusions There is high burden of unmet needs in community-living young stroke survivors which are spread disproportionately across the identified domains.

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