4.5 Review

Telehealth Interventions to Support Self-Management in Stroke Survivors: A Systematic Review

Journal

HEALTHCARE
Volume 9, Issue 4, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/healthcare9040472

Keywords

telehealth; self-management; stroke survivor; systematic review

Funding

  1. Inje University [20190022]

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Telehealth intervention is an effective method for optimizing self-management support in stroke survivors. It focuses on areas such as post-stroke depression, obesity management, participation, functional mobility, and activities of daily living, with messaging as the most commonly used delivery type. Education, psychological support, and lifestyle advice were commonly employed as self-management support components. While the intervention had positive effects on goal achievement, emotional state, and mobility, the effects were not consistently found in all outcomes. Various options in terms of delivery types and support components suggest the potential for personalized interventions.
Telehealth (TH) intervention is a method to optimize self-management (SM) support in stroke survivors. Objectives of this study included identifying the TH-SM intervention's focus and SM support components, the TH delivery type, and the TH-SM support effects on stroke survivors. Five databases were searched for the years 2005-2020 to identify TH-SM support interventions for stroke survivors. Randomized controlled trials and quasi-experimental, one-group re-post study designs were included. Ten studies were reviewed. TH-SM support focused on post-stroke depression, obesity management, participation, functional mobility, and activities of daily living. The TH delivery type most used in selected studies was messaging. Regarding the SM support components, the education component was used in all studies, and psychological support and lifestyle advice and support were used in 8 out of 10 studies. TH-SM intervention had positive effects in terms of goal achievement for SM behavior, emotional state, and mobility of clinical outcomes, and TH acceptance in stroke survivors. Although the TH-SM-supported intervention effects were not found consistently in all outcomes, this review discovered a positive effect on various SM-related outcomes. In addition, TH delivery types and SM support components showed the possibility of various options to be considered for intervention. Therefore, we suggest that TH-SM supported intervention is a positive alternative for SM support in stroke survivors.

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