Experiences of Self-Management Support Following a Stroke: A Meta-Review of Qualitative Systematic Reviews.

<h4>Background</h4>Supporting self-management in stroke patients improves psychological and functional outcomes but evidence on how to achieve this is sparse. We aimed to synthesise evidence from systematic reviews of qualitative studies in an overarching meta-review to inform the delive...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Gemma Pearce, Hilary Pinnock, Eleni Epiphaniou, Hannah L Parke, Emily Heavey, Christopher J Griffiths, Trish Greenhalgh, Aziz Sheikh, Stephanie J C Taylor
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2015-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0141803
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1850125228260196352
author Gemma Pearce
Gemma Pearce
Hilary Pinnock
Eleni Epiphaniou
Hannah L Parke
Emily Heavey
Christopher J Griffiths
Trish Greenhalgh
Aziz Sheikh
Stephanie J C Taylor
author_facet Gemma Pearce
Gemma Pearce
Hilary Pinnock
Eleni Epiphaniou
Hannah L Parke
Emily Heavey
Christopher J Griffiths
Trish Greenhalgh
Aziz Sheikh
Stephanie J C Taylor
author_sort Gemma Pearce
collection DOAJ
description <h4>Background</h4>Supporting self-management in stroke patients improves psychological and functional outcomes but evidence on how to achieve this is sparse. We aimed to synthesise evidence from systematic reviews of qualitative studies in an overarching meta-review to inform the delivery and development of self-management support interventions.<h4>Methods</h4>We systematically searched eight electronic databases including MEDLINE, EMBASE and CINAHL for qualitative systematic reviews (published January 1993 to June 2012). We included studies exploring patients', carers' or health care professionals' experiences relevant to self-management support following a stroke, including studies describing the lived experience of surviving a stroke. We meta-synthesised the included review findings using a meta-ethnographic framework.<h4>Results</h4>Seven reviews, reporting 130 unique studies, were included. Themes emerging from the reviews were pertinent, consistent and showed data saturation; though explicit mention of self-management support was rare. Our meta-review highlighted the devastating impact of stroke on patients' self-image; the varying needs for self-management support across the trajectory of recovery; the need for psychological and emotional support throughout recovery particularly when physical recovery plateaus; the considerable information needs of patients and carers which also vary across the trajectory of recovery; the importance of good patient-professional communication; the potential benefits of goal-setting and action-planning; and the need for social support which might be met by groups for stroke survivors.<h4>Conclusions</h4>The observed data saturation suggests that, currently, no further qualitative research simply describing the lived experience of stroke is needed; we propose that it would be more useful to focus on qualitative research informing self-management support interventions and their implementation. Our findings demonstrate both the on-going importance of self-management support and the evolving priorities throughout the stages of recovery following a stroke. The challenge now is to ensure these findings inform routine practice and the development of interventions to support self-management amongst stroke survivors.
format Article
id doaj-art-d39db2d6dd074bfba6f710b33796f168
institution OA Journals
issn 1932-6203
language English
publishDate 2015-01-01
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
record_format Article
series PLoS ONE
spelling doaj-art-d39db2d6dd074bfba6f710b33796f1682025-08-20T02:34:09ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032015-01-011012e014180310.1371/journal.pone.0141803Experiences of Self-Management Support Following a Stroke: A Meta-Review of Qualitative Systematic Reviews.Gemma PearceGemma PearceHilary PinnockEleni EpiphaniouHannah L ParkeEmily HeaveyChristopher J GriffithsTrish GreenhalghAziz SheikhStephanie J C Taylor<h4>Background</h4>Supporting self-management in stroke patients improves psychological and functional outcomes but evidence on how to achieve this is sparse. We aimed to synthesise evidence from systematic reviews of qualitative studies in an overarching meta-review to inform the delivery and development of self-management support interventions.<h4>Methods</h4>We systematically searched eight electronic databases including MEDLINE, EMBASE and CINAHL for qualitative systematic reviews (published January 1993 to June 2012). We included studies exploring patients', carers' or health care professionals' experiences relevant to self-management support following a stroke, including studies describing the lived experience of surviving a stroke. We meta-synthesised the included review findings using a meta-ethnographic framework.<h4>Results</h4>Seven reviews, reporting 130 unique studies, were included. Themes emerging from the reviews were pertinent, consistent and showed data saturation; though explicit mention of self-management support was rare. Our meta-review highlighted the devastating impact of stroke on patients' self-image; the varying needs for self-management support across the trajectory of recovery; the need for psychological and emotional support throughout recovery particularly when physical recovery plateaus; the considerable information needs of patients and carers which also vary across the trajectory of recovery; the importance of good patient-professional communication; the potential benefits of goal-setting and action-planning; and the need for social support which might be met by groups for stroke survivors.<h4>Conclusions</h4>The observed data saturation suggests that, currently, no further qualitative research simply describing the lived experience of stroke is needed; we propose that it would be more useful to focus on qualitative research informing self-management support interventions and their implementation. Our findings demonstrate both the on-going importance of self-management support and the evolving priorities throughout the stages of recovery following a stroke. The challenge now is to ensure these findings inform routine practice and the development of interventions to support self-management amongst stroke survivors.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0141803
spellingShingle Gemma Pearce
Gemma Pearce
Hilary Pinnock
Eleni Epiphaniou
Hannah L Parke
Emily Heavey
Christopher J Griffiths
Trish Greenhalgh
Aziz Sheikh
Stephanie J C Taylor
Experiences of Self-Management Support Following a Stroke: A Meta-Review of Qualitative Systematic Reviews.
PLoS ONE
title Experiences of Self-Management Support Following a Stroke: A Meta-Review of Qualitative Systematic Reviews.
title_full Experiences of Self-Management Support Following a Stroke: A Meta-Review of Qualitative Systematic Reviews.
title_fullStr Experiences of Self-Management Support Following a Stroke: A Meta-Review of Qualitative Systematic Reviews.
title_full_unstemmed Experiences of Self-Management Support Following a Stroke: A Meta-Review of Qualitative Systematic Reviews.
title_short Experiences of Self-Management Support Following a Stroke: A Meta-Review of Qualitative Systematic Reviews.
title_sort experiences of self management support following a stroke a meta review of qualitative systematic reviews
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0141803
work_keys_str_mv AT gemmapearce experiencesofselfmanagementsupportfollowingastrokeametareviewofqualitativesystematicreviews
AT gemmapearce experiencesofselfmanagementsupportfollowingastrokeametareviewofqualitativesystematicreviews
AT hilarypinnock experiencesofselfmanagementsupportfollowingastrokeametareviewofqualitativesystematicreviews
AT eleniepiphaniou experiencesofselfmanagementsupportfollowingastrokeametareviewofqualitativesystematicreviews
AT hannahlparke experiencesofselfmanagementsupportfollowingastrokeametareviewofqualitativesystematicreviews
AT emilyheavey experiencesofselfmanagementsupportfollowingastrokeametareviewofqualitativesystematicreviews
AT christopherjgriffiths experiencesofselfmanagementsupportfollowingastrokeametareviewofqualitativesystematicreviews
AT trishgreenhalgh experiencesofselfmanagementsupportfollowingastrokeametareviewofqualitativesystematicreviews
AT azizsheikh experiencesofselfmanagementsupportfollowingastrokeametareviewofqualitativesystematicreviews
AT stephaniejctaylor experiencesofselfmanagementsupportfollowingastrokeametareviewofqualitativesystematicreviews