The impact of a toolkit on use of standardised measurement tools in stroke rehabilitation

Clin Rehabil. 2015 Sep;29(9):926-34. doi: 10.1177/0269215514562590. Epub 2014 Dec 11.

Abstract

Objective: To evaluate the impact of a toolkit of psychometrically robust measurement tools, the Greater Manchester Assessment for Stroke Rehabilitation (G-MASTER) toolkit, on the use of measurement tools during stroke rehabilitation

Design: Mixed methods cohort design using non-participant observation of multi-disciplinary team meetings and semi-structured interviews with members of the team over three months before and three months after implementation of the assessment toolkit. Development and implementation of the toolkit are also described.

Setting: Ten in-patient stroke services in a large UK city.

Subjects: Members of the participating multi-disciplinary stroke teams.

Results: Before implementation standardised measures were seldom used in team meetings. After implementation, use of all measurement tools significantly increased (36% to 81% of occasions, P<0.000). Staff were generally positive about the toolkit and felt it enabled more accurate problem identification, effective progress monitoring, timely decision-making, communication and promoted inter-team relationships.

Conclusions: A toolkit of standardised measurement tools can be feasibly and acceptably implemented into stroke rehabilitation. It increases the use of measurement tools by the multi-disciplinary team and improves the processes and quality of care.

Keywords: Stroke; measurement; multi-disciplinary team.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Clinical Decision-Making*
  • Humans
  • Outcome Assessment, Health Care*
  • Patient Care Team / organization & administration*
  • Stroke Rehabilitation*