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Increasing stroke patients' success in self-medication programs using an interdisciplinary cognitive rehabilitation approach.

Resource type
Author/contributor
Title
Increasing stroke patients' success in self-medication programs using an interdisciplinary cognitive rehabilitation approach.
Abstract
Rehabilitation programs strive to help patients become more independent in all aspects of daily living. Therefore, management of a patient's healthcare requirements should be an integral part of the rehabilitation program, including management of medications. Some rehabilitation programs implement self-medication programs (SMP); however, patients with cognitive deficits are often excluded. This study explored whether patients with cognitive deficits due to stroke could successfully complete an SMP using an interdisciplinary cognitive rehabilitation approach. Twenty-seven stroke patients and 36 debilitated patients with cognitive deficits participated in an SMP. A nurse and a pharmacist educated patients on their medications, and a speech-language pathologist provided cognitive rehabilitation to the stroke patients, which incorporated information from the SMP. Eighty-one percent of the stroke patients successfully completed the SMP, compared to 36% of the debilitated patients. Thus, an interdisciplinary approach to medication management for cognitively impaired stroke patients holds promise.
Publication
Rehabilitation nursing : the official journal of the Association of Rehabilitation Nurses
Date
SEP-OCT 2007
Volume
32
Issue
5
Pages
210-219
Journal Abbr
Rehabil Nurs
DOI
Citation Key
purdyIncreasingStrokePatients2007
ISSN
0278-4807
Language
English
Extra
3 citations (Crossref) [2023-10-31] Place: United States Purdy, Mary. Southern Connecticut State University, Department of Communication Disorders, USA. purdym1@southernct.edu
Citation
Purdy, M. (2007). Increasing stroke patients’ success in self-medication programs using an interdisciplinary cognitive rehabilitation approach. Rehabilitation Nursing : The Official Journal of the Association of Rehabilitation Nurses, 32(5), 210–219. https://doi.org/10/gmvm56