Faculty of Health and Social Sciences, Bournemouth University, Bournemouth, UK.
Department of Clinical Psychology, University of East Anglia, Norwich, UK.
BMJ Open. 2019 Mar 8;9(3):e021098. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2017-021098.
People often experience distress following stroke due to fundamental challenges to their identity.
To evaluate (1) the acceptability of 'HeART of Stroke' (HoS), a community-based arts and health group intervention, to increase psychological well-being; and (2) the feasibility of a definitive randomised controlled trial (RCT).
Two-centre, 24-month, parallel-arm RCT with qualitative and economic components. Randomisation was stratified by centre and stroke severity. Participant blinding was not possible. Outcome assessment blinding was attempted.
Community.
Community-dwelling adults ≤2 years poststroke recruited via hospital clinical teams/databases or community stroke/rehabilitation teams.
Artist-facilitated arts and health group intervention (HoS) (ten 2-hour sessions over 14 weeks) plus usual care (UC) versus UC.
The outcomes were self-reported measures of well-being, mood, capability, health-related quality of life, self-esteem and self-concept (baseline and 5 months postrandomisation). Key feasibility parameters were gathered, data collection methods were piloted, and participant interviews (n=24) explored the acceptability of the intervention and study processes.
Despite a low recruitment rate (14%; 95% CI 11% to 18%), 88% of the recruitment target was met, with 29 participants randomised to HoS and 27 to UC (57% male; mean (SD) age=70 (12.1) years; time since stroke=9 (6.1) months). Follow-up data were available for 47 of 56 (84%; 95% CI 72% to 91%). Completion rates for a study-specific resource use questionnaire were 79% and 68% (National Health Service and societal perspectives). Five people declined HoS postrandomisation; of the remaining 24 who attended, 83% attended ≥6 sessions. Preliminary effect sizes for candidate primary outcomes were in the direction of benefit for the HoS arm. Participants found study processes acceptable. The intervention cost an estimated £456 per person and was well-received (no intervention-related serious adverse events were reported).
Findings from this first community-based study of an arts and health intervention for people poststroke suggest a definitive RCT is feasible. Recruitment methods will be revised.
ISRCTN99728983.
由于身份认同面临根本挑战,中风后人们通常会感到痛苦。
评估(1)基于社区的艺术和健康团体干预措施“心脏中风”(HoS)对提高心理健康的可接受性;(2)确证随机对照试验(RCT)的可行性。
为期 24 个月的、具有定性和经济学组成部分的两中心、平行臂 RCT。随机化按中心和中风严重程度分层。参与者无法被蒙蔽。试图对结果评估进行蒙蔽。
社区。
社区居住的成年人,中风后 ≤2 年,通过医院临床团队/数据库或社区中风/康复团队招募。
艺术家主导的艺术和健康团体干预(HoS)(14 周内 10 次 2 小时的课程)加常规护理(UC)与 UC 相比。
尽管招募率较低(14%;95%置信区间 11%至 18%),但仍达到了 88%的招募目标,29 名参与者被随机分配到 HoS 组,27 名参与者被随机分配到 UC 组(57%为男性;平均(标准差)年龄=70(12.1)岁;中风后时间=9(6.1)个月)。56 名参与者中有 47 名(84%;95%置信区间 72%至 91%)可获得随访数据。一项特定的资源使用问卷的完成率为 79%和 68%(从国家卫生服务和社会角度来看)。5 人在随机分组后拒绝 HoS;其余 24 名参加者中,83%参加了≥6 次课程。候选主要结局的初步效应大小表明 HoS 组有获益的趋势。参与者认为研究过程是可以接受的。该干预措施估计每人花费 456 英镑,且受到好评(未报告与干预相关的严重不良事件)。
这项基于社区的中风后人群艺术和健康干预的首次研究结果表明,确证性 RCT 是可行的。将修订招募方法。
ISRCTN99728983。