1. Unmet needs in long-term outpatient rehabilitative care: a qualitative and multi-perspective study in Japan.
- Author
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Takashi, Naoki, Musumari, Patou Masika, Techasrivichien, Teeranee, Suguimoto, S. Pilar, Ono-Kihara, Masako, Kihara, Masahiro, and Nakayama, Takeo
- Subjects
CAREGIVER attitudes ,RESEARCH ,ATTITUDES of medical personnel ,INTERVIEWING ,PATIENT-centered care ,PATIENTS' attitudes ,EXPERIENCE ,QUALITATIVE research ,FAMILY-centered care ,PSYCHOSOCIAL factors ,STROKE patients ,QUALITY assurance ,RESEARCH funding ,REHABILITATION ,THEMATIC analysis ,DATA analysis software ,MEDICAL needs assessment ,LONG-term health care ,OUTPATIENT services in hospitals ,ALLIED health personnel - Abstract
This study explores the experiences and unmet needs related to post-discharge long-term rehabilitation from triadic perspective of male patients with stroke, caregivers, and rehabilitation professionals. This is an exploratory qualitative study using in-depth interviews conducted in two outpatient rehabilitation facilities in Japan. Nine male patients with stroke, ten caregivers, and five rehabilitation professionals participated in this study. The data were coded, followed by thematic analysis. Patients who did not achieve further physical recovery regardless of their efforts experienced a loss of motivation and lost sight of their goals. Moreover, caregivers regarded such patients as lazy and reported feeling frustrated with them. Furthermore, patients and caregivers had unmet needs regarding communication with professionals and psychological and emotional care. In contrast, professionals perceived time constraints on outpatient rehabilitation service provision and sometimes narrowed the scope of the care approach to physical function aspects for providing services efficiently. They also expressed difficulties in identifying patients' needs, values, and meaningful goals. These findings suggest that in Japanese post-stroke outpatient rehabilitation, there is a need to adopt a comprehensive care approach, enhance the quality of communication, and involve caregivers in the rehabilitation process in limited-resource situations. In long-term outpatient rehabilitation services in the community, stroke patients and their caregivers often face a physical recovery plateau. A comprehensive approach such as enhancing the quality of communication and providing psychological and emotional care —other than physical rehabilitation— is needed, particularly once the patient physical recovery stagnates. Involving caregivers in the rehabilitation process may be helpful for rehabilitation professionals to understand a potential problem that the patient cannot express but the caregiver can. It can be crucial to develop strategies that enable the rehabilitation professionals to provide a comprehensive care approach and prevent too much reliance on physical rehabilitation under the time-constraint situation in outpatient rehabilitation services. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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