Loading...
Thumbnail Image
Item

Setting up a constraint induced movement therapy service within a community stroke team

Harrison, Natalie
Barnes, Kate
Killick, Catherine
Williams, Gavin
Abstract
Evidence suggests that 80% of stroke survivors have upper limb motor impairments affecting their independence. There is a strong evidence base for using constraint induced movement therapy (CIMT) to improve upper limb function and overcome learned non-use. This intervention restrains the non-affected upper limb, increasing motivation to use the affected limb in functional tasks. NICE guidelines(2013) and RCP(2016) guidelines support the use of CIMT for upper limb rehabilitation following stroke. There has also been a Cochrane literature review which suggests that CIMT is significantly more effective than conventional treatment for improving motor function.
MIDER Authors
Citations
Altmetric:
Date
2018
Type
Conference Proceeding
Subject
Stroke rehabilitation, Motor skills disorders
Citation
Harrison, N., Barnes, K., Killick, C. & Williams, G. (2018). Setting up a constraint induced movement therapy service within a community stroke team. 13th UK Stroke Forum Conference, 4-6 December 2018 Telford, United Kingdom. London: 13th UK Stroke Forum Programme.
Journal / Source Title
DOI
PMID
Publisher
Publisher’s URL
Publisher’s statement
Note / Copyright