Abstract

BackgroundPerinatal stroke is the leading cause of unilateral (hemiparetic) cerebral palsy, with life-long personal, social and financial consequences. Translational research findings indicate that early therapy intervention has the potential for significant improvements in long-term outcome in terms of motor function. By involving families and health professionals in the development and design stage, we aimed to produce a therapy intervention which they would engage with.MethodsNine parents of children with hemiparesis and fourteen health professionals involved in the care of infants with perinatal stroke took part in peer review and focus groups to discuss evolving therapy materials, with revisions made iteratively. The materials and approach were also discussed at a meeting of the London Child Stroke Research Reference Group. Focus group data were coded using Normalisation Process Theory constructs to explore potential barriers and facilitators to routine uptake of the intervention.ResultsWe developed the Early Therapy in Perinatal Stroke (eTIPS) program - a parent-delivered, home-based complex intervention addressing a current gap in practice for infants in the first 6 months of life after unilateral perinatal stroke and with the aim of improving motor outcome. Parents and health professionals saw the intervention as different from usual practice, and valuable (high coherence). They were keen to engage (high cognitive participation). They considered the tasks for parents to be achievable (high collective action). They demonstrated trust in the approach and felt that parents would undertake the recommended activities (high collective action). They saw the approach as flexible and adaptable (high reflexive monitoring). Following suggestions made, we added a section on involving the extended family, and obtained funding for a website and videos to supplement written materials.ConclusionsFocus groups with parents and health professionals provided meaningful feedback to iteratively improve the intervention materials prior to embarking on a pilot study. The intervention has a high potential to normalize and become a routine part of parents’ interactions with their child following unilateral perinatal stroke.

Highlights

  • Perinatal stroke is the leading cause of unilateral cerebral palsy, with life-long personal, social and financial consequences

  • We aimed to develop a manualised, parent-delivered, home-based early therapy intervention for the first 6 months of life, to improve motor function in infants with predominantly unilateral perinatal stroke

  • Parents described varying experiences in terms of promptness or otherwise of diagnosis following initial presentation: they were aware that some infants would not be diagnosed until after the first 6 months of life

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Summary

Introduction

Perinatal stroke is the leading cause of unilateral (hemiparetic) cerebral palsy, with life-long personal, social and financial consequences. Translational research findings indicate that early therapy intervention has the potential for significant improvements in long-term outcome in terms of motor function. Perinatal stroke is a common cause of unilateral cerebral palsy [3, 6, 7, 10,11,12,13], with long-term adverse effects on activities of daily living [14], quality of life and self-esteem [15]. The options for immediate treatment of perinatal stroke remain few, though this is an area of research interest [23]. Effective early intervention for perinatal stroke has the potential for lifelong benefits [24]

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