This thesis describes the wide range of long-term consequences in stroke patients who received multidisciplinary rehabilitation.Over a third of them reported pain in the shoulder, arm, wrist or... Show moreThis thesis describes the wide range of long-term consequences in stroke patients who received multidisciplinary rehabilitation.Over a third of them reported pain in the shoulder, arm, wrist or hand. About the same percentage had low patient activation scores, which is a prerequisite for effective self-management to cope with the consequences of stroke. Almost half of patients who were working before the stroke managed to maintain paid employment for two and a half years. These patients were more satisfied with their participation than patients who did not return to work. Average independence in daily activities increased during rehabilitation. The Barthel Index was found to be more sensitive to measure change than the Utrecht Scale for Evaluation of Rehabilitation. Health-related quality of life increased on average from start of rehabilitation to one year afterwards. The average social costs in the first year were €63,045 for inpatients and €24,533 for outpatients. The burden of the nearest of stroke patients was investigated, which showed that a third of them experienced a high burden.In conclusion, the consequences of stroke can also remain present, worsen or develop in the long term and are present for the individual patient, their nearest and the healthcare system. Show less
Kroon, F.P.B.; Heijde, D. van der; Maxwell, L.J.; Beaton, D.E.; Abishek, A.; Berenbaum, F.; ... ; Kloppenburg, M. 2021
Objective: Physical function is one of the Outcome Measures in Rheumatology (OMERACT) core outcome domains for hand osteoarthritis studies. Our aim was to select appropriate instrument(s) to... Show moreObjective: Physical function is one of the Outcome Measures in Rheumatology (OMERACT) core outcome domains for hand osteoarthritis studies. Our aim was to select appropriate instrument(s) to measure this domain, as part of the development of a core outcome measurement set.Methods: Following the OMERACT Filter 2.1 instrument selection process, the (function subscale of) the Australian/Canadian Hand Osteoarthritis Index (AUSCAN), Functional Index for Hand Osteoarthritis (FIHOA) and Michigan Hand Outcomes Questionnaire (MHQ) were assessed for domain match, feasibility, truth and discrimination. Data gathered from available literature, working group and patient surveys, and additional analyses in two hand osteoarthritis cohorts were used to inform a consensus process.Results were summarized in Summary of Measurements Properties tables and reviewed by the OMERACT technical advisory group. Results: MHQ passed the assessment of domain match and feasibility by the working group and patient research partners. For AUSCAN important limitations in feasibility were noted, but domain match was good. FIHOA did not pass the assessment and was not taken through the follow-up assessment. Based on published literature, reliability and construct/longitudinal validity of both MHQ and AUSCAN fulfilled OMERACT standards. While clinical trial discrimination and thresholds of meaning were good for AUSCAN, results for MHQ were ambiguous.Conclusion: MHQ was provisionally endorsed as OMERACT core outcome measure for the core domain physical function. While AUSCAN may have better metric properties than MHQ, it received provisional endorsement as a second measure of function due to important feasibility issues. A research agenda to merit full endorsement was set. (c) 2021 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier Inc. Show less
This thesis describes research done in the field of hand osteoarthritis, and had the following three aims:1) To evaluate the current state of treatment options in hand osteoarthritis;2) To... Show moreThis thesis describes research done in the field of hand osteoarthritis, and had the following three aims:1) To evaluate the current state of treatment options in hand osteoarthritis;2) To investigate the role of inflammation as a treatment target in hand osteoarthritis; and3) To facilitate development of new treatment options by improving outcome measurement in hand osteoarthritis. Show less