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Walking ability and functional status after post-acute care for stroke rehabilitation in different age groups: a prospective study based on propensity score matching
Author(s) -
Chung-Yuan Wang,
S. Miyoshi,
Chang-Hung Chen,
Kai-Chun Lee,
Long-Chung Chang,
Jo-Hsuan Chung,
HonYi Shi
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
aging
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.473
H-Index - 90
ISSN - 1945-4589
DOI - 10.18632/aging.103288
Subject(s) - berg balance scale , activities of daily living , propensity score matching , rehabilitation , medicine , physical therapy , balance (ability) , stroke (engine) , barthel index , acute stroke , physical medicine and rehabilitation , mechanical engineering , tissue plasminogen activator , engineering
Few studies have compared how rehabilitative post-acute care affects recovery of walking ability and other functions after stroke in different age groups. After propensity score matching (1:1), 316 stroke patients were separated into an aged group (age ≥65 years, n=158) and a non-aged group (age <65 years, n=158). Both groups significantly improved in Barthel index, EuroQol-5 dimension, Berg balance scale, 6-minute walking distance and 5-meter walking speed ( P <0.001). The non-aged group had significantly larger improvements in Berg balance scale, instrumental activities of daily living, EuroQol-5 dimension and 6-minute walking distance ( P <0.001) compared to the aged group. The two groups did not significantly differ in Barthel index, 5-meter walking speed, length of stay, and cost. The aged group had poorer walking ability and poorer instrumental activities of daily living compared to the non-aged group. After intensive rehabilitative post-acute care, however, the aged group improved in walking ability, functional performance and mental health. Intensive strength training for unaffected lower limbs in the stroke patients achieved good recovery of walking ability and other functions. Overall, intensive rehabilitative post-acute care improved self-care ability and decreased informal care costs. Rehabilitative PAC under per-diem reimbursement is efficient and economical for stroke patients in an aging society.

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