People who have had a stroke should be offered additional rehabilitation
People who have had a stroke and who have continuing impairment or limitations on their activities should be offered additional rehabilitation to help them recover
The recommendations are made today (18 October 2023) in NICE’s updated guideline on stroke rehabilitation in adults.
The guideline says that people who have had a stroke should be offered, needs-based rehabilitation for at least 3 hours a day on at least 5 days of the week covering a range of multidisciplinary therapy including physiotherapy, occupational therapy and speech and language therapy.
This is an increase in rehabilitation compared with NICE’s original guideline published in 2013.
The evidence reviewed by the independent committee for the update showed more intensive rehabilitation improved quality of life and activities of daily living. They also heard from people recovering from stroke, and their families and carers, who felt strongly that more intensive rehabilitation would be useful in helping them to recover faster.
Although stroke is one of the biggest causes of death in the UK, thanks to improvements in organised stroke care and new acute treatments, most people survive a first stroke. It is estimated that there are around 85,000 strokes every year in England, and around 1 million stroke survivors, many of who are living with its long-term effects (1).
Stroke care starts immediately after the onset of stroke symptoms. Most acute care is delivered within stroke units as part of organised stroke services.
Post-acute care can be delivered in secondary or primary care, often by specialist multidisciplinary teams working across different organisations. Their aim is to deliver rehabilitation to help people maximise function, minimise their pain and distress, and enable them to live as independently as possible in their usual setting.
In addition to the new recommendations on the intensity of stroke rehabilitation, the updated guideline also makes new recommendations in several other areas including telerehabilitation (2), the assessment of visual and hearing impairments and measuring fatigue.
References
1 Stroke Association
2 Telerehabilitation is a blanket term applied to approaches that employ an ever-expanding range of technologies, connecting patient and therapist in real time via any device, or through computer-based interventions that are remotely monitored and adapted offline by a therapist, or a combination of both.