Understanding the landscape of physical activity and exercise in stroke rehabilitation for older adults: a scoping review

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Standard

Understanding the landscape of physical activity and exercise in stroke rehabilitation for older adults: a scoping review. / Clay, Georgia Emily; Evans, Adam B.; Allen-Collinson, Jacquelyn; Henderson, Hannah.

2022. Abstract fra European Stroke Organisation Conference.

Publikation: KonferencebidragKonferenceabstrakt til konferenceForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Clay, GE, Evans, AB, Allen-Collinson, J & Henderson, H 2022, 'Understanding the landscape of physical activity and exercise in stroke rehabilitation for older adults: a scoping review', European Stroke Organisation Conference, 04/05/2022 - 06/05/2022. <https://eprints.lincoln.ac.uk/id/eprint/49992/>

APA

Clay, G. E., Evans, A. B., Allen-Collinson, J., & Henderson, H. (2022). Understanding the landscape of physical activity and exercise in stroke rehabilitation for older adults: a scoping review. Abstract fra European Stroke Organisation Conference. https://eprints.lincoln.ac.uk/id/eprint/49992/

Vancouver

Clay GE, Evans AB, Allen-Collinson J, Henderson H. Understanding the landscape of physical activity and exercise in stroke rehabilitation for older adults: a scoping review. 2022. Abstract fra European Stroke Organisation Conference.

Author

Clay, Georgia Emily ; Evans, Adam B. ; Allen-Collinson, Jacquelyn ; Henderson, Hannah. / Understanding the landscape of physical activity and exercise in stroke rehabilitation for older adults: a scoping review. Abstract fra European Stroke Organisation Conference.

Bibtex

@conference{5dea96b2bd96457bb7114afd64d43644,
title = "Understanding the landscape of physical activity and exercise in stroke rehabilitation for older adults: a scoping review",
abstract = "Background and aims: Older adults are at higher risk of stroke and are more likely to be insufficiently active. Despite demonstrated benefits of physical activity post-stroke, there is limited evidence of consistent support offered specifically for older adults. It is therefore timely and important to consider the policy and practice domains of physical activity within community stroke-rehabilitation.Methods: A scoping review was conducted. A total of 8 electronic databases, appropriate international stroke policy guidance documents and websites were searched. Initially, authors reviewed 25 titles, abstracts and policy aims independently to assesses appropriateness to the inclusion criteria and research questions.Results: After removing duplicates, a total of 800 research articles were screened, as well as relevant international policy documents and clinical guidance. Preliminary findings indicate that stroke policy and guidance is becoming more activity-inclusive, however recommendations for being active are often made within the context of generalised guidelines and focus predominantly on structured activity via rehabilitation in acute settings. Within the research, many RCTs demonstrate great potential for post-stroke exercise-based programmes in adults/older adults, yet there is limited evidence of integration of such interventions in everyday community rehabilitation practice.Conclusions: A comprehensive map of policy, research and practice is being created to demonstrate the current landscape of the integration of physical activity and exercise for older adult stroke survivors. There appears to be some contestation, however, between recommendations in stroke policy and guidance, and further insight into the impact of this, on both services and stroke survivors, is urgently required.",
author = "Clay, {Georgia Emily} and Evans, {Adam B.} and Jacquelyn Allen-Collinson and Hannah Henderson",
year = "2022",
month = may,
day = "4",
language = "English",
note = "European Stroke Organisation Conference ; Conference date: 04-05-2022 Through 06-05-2022",

}

RIS

TY - ABST

T1 - Understanding the landscape of physical activity and exercise in stroke rehabilitation for older adults: a scoping review

AU - Clay, Georgia Emily

AU - Evans, Adam B.

AU - Allen-Collinson, Jacquelyn

AU - Henderson, Hannah

PY - 2022/5/4

Y1 - 2022/5/4

N2 - Background and aims: Older adults are at higher risk of stroke and are more likely to be insufficiently active. Despite demonstrated benefits of physical activity post-stroke, there is limited evidence of consistent support offered specifically for older adults. It is therefore timely and important to consider the policy and practice domains of physical activity within community stroke-rehabilitation.Methods: A scoping review was conducted. A total of 8 electronic databases, appropriate international stroke policy guidance documents and websites were searched. Initially, authors reviewed 25 titles, abstracts and policy aims independently to assesses appropriateness to the inclusion criteria and research questions.Results: After removing duplicates, a total of 800 research articles were screened, as well as relevant international policy documents and clinical guidance. Preliminary findings indicate that stroke policy and guidance is becoming more activity-inclusive, however recommendations for being active are often made within the context of generalised guidelines and focus predominantly on structured activity via rehabilitation in acute settings. Within the research, many RCTs demonstrate great potential for post-stroke exercise-based programmes in adults/older adults, yet there is limited evidence of integration of such interventions in everyday community rehabilitation practice.Conclusions: A comprehensive map of policy, research and practice is being created to demonstrate the current landscape of the integration of physical activity and exercise for older adult stroke survivors. There appears to be some contestation, however, between recommendations in stroke policy and guidance, and further insight into the impact of this, on both services and stroke survivors, is urgently required.

AB - Background and aims: Older adults are at higher risk of stroke and are more likely to be insufficiently active. Despite demonstrated benefits of physical activity post-stroke, there is limited evidence of consistent support offered specifically for older adults. It is therefore timely and important to consider the policy and practice domains of physical activity within community stroke-rehabilitation.Methods: A scoping review was conducted. A total of 8 electronic databases, appropriate international stroke policy guidance documents and websites were searched. Initially, authors reviewed 25 titles, abstracts and policy aims independently to assesses appropriateness to the inclusion criteria and research questions.Results: After removing duplicates, a total of 800 research articles were screened, as well as relevant international policy documents and clinical guidance. Preliminary findings indicate that stroke policy and guidance is becoming more activity-inclusive, however recommendations for being active are often made within the context of generalised guidelines and focus predominantly on structured activity via rehabilitation in acute settings. Within the research, many RCTs demonstrate great potential for post-stroke exercise-based programmes in adults/older adults, yet there is limited evidence of integration of such interventions in everyday community rehabilitation practice.Conclusions: A comprehensive map of policy, research and practice is being created to demonstrate the current landscape of the integration of physical activity and exercise for older adult stroke survivors. There appears to be some contestation, however, between recommendations in stroke policy and guidance, and further insight into the impact of this, on both services and stroke survivors, is urgently required.

M3 - Conference abstract for conference

T2 - European Stroke Organisation Conference

Y2 - 4 May 2022 through 6 May 2022

ER -

ID: 366824672