articleInternational Journal of StrokeApr 14, 2016Closed access

Canadian stroke best practice recommendations: Stroke rehabilitation practice guidelines, update 2015

University Health Network · University of Toronto · +32 more institutions

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Abstract

Stroke rehabilitation is a progressive, dynamic, goal-orientated process aimed at enabling a person with impairment to reach their optimal physical, cognitive, emotional, communicative, social and/or functional activity level. After a stroke, patients often continue to require rehabilitation for persistent deficits related to spasticity, upper and lower extremity dysfunction, shoulder and central pain, mobility/gait, dysphagia, vision, and communication. Each year in Canada 62,000 people experience a stroke. Among stroke survivors, over 6500 individuals access in-patient stroke rehabilitation and stay a median of 30 days (inter-quartile range 19 to 45 days). The 2015 update of the Canadian Stroke Best Practice…

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619
total citations
FWCI
40.32
Percentile
100%
References
40
Citations per year

Authors

41

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Rehabilitation
  • Medicine
  • Stroke (engine)
  • Dysphagia
  • Physical therapy
  • Physical medicine and rehabilitation
  • Psychological intervention
  • Spasticity
UN Sustainable Development Goals
  • Zero hunger
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