A new study has suggested that your family's involvement in your exercise therapy could significantly improve your function and recovery after stroke.

"It's a win-win situation for everyone," said Emma Stokes, the study's principal investigator and Senior Lecturer in Physiotherapy at Trinity College Dublin in Ireland. "People with stroke, their families and healthcare providers share in the benefit."
The study involved 40 male and female stroke survivors, all Caucasian. Half received routine exercise therapy, while the others received the FAmily Mediated Exercise intervention (FAME) in addition to routine therapy.
The routine exercise therapy group included seven men and 13 women, average age 70. The FAME group had 13 men and seven women, average age 63. Family members helped the stroke patient do exercises in 35-minute increments seven days per week for eight weeks to improve leg function. The exercises were simple enough to be done at the bedside, either at the hospital or at home. Exercise was tailored to each individual and modified weekly to reflect improvement. Researchers assessed the outcome of the two groups after the treatment period and at three-month follow-up.
Rose Galvin Ph.D, FAME's research physiotherapist conducted brief training sessions for the participating family members and met with them on a weekly basis.
Length of hospital stay in the family exercise group was an average 35 days compared to 40 days in the routine exercise group.
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Family members who participated in the exercise therapy also experienced a major benefit.
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The study appears in the March print issue of Stroke: Journal of the American Heart Association.
Source-ANI