Stroke Survivor’s Satisfaction and Experience with Rehabilitation Services: A Qualitative Systematic Review

Author:

Abu Saydah Hanan12ORCID,Turabi Ruqayyah2ORCID,Sackley Catherine3,Moffatt Fiona3

Affiliation:

1. Department of Medicine and Health Sciences, University of Nottingham, Nottingham NG7 2QL, UK

2. Department of Physiotherapy, College of Applied Medical Sciences, Jizan University, Jizan 45142, Saudi Arabia

3. School of Health Sciences, University of Nottingham, Nottingham NG7 2QL, UK

Abstract

Research in healthcare is increasingly focused on quality assurance and continuous quality improvement aiming to promote service quality. Satisfaction is a key endpoint in outcomes research and service benchmarking, along with “traditional” clinical outcomes. What controls stroke survivors’ satisfaction differs among qualitative studies’ conclusions, but there is general consensus on the importance of communication, improvement in activity, and engagement in goal setting. This review aims to collect and synthesise studies of the satisfaction of stroke survivors with rehabilitation services. A systematic search was conducted in seven electronic databases, including CINAHL, OVID, Pedro, Scopus Midline, Web of Science, and PubMed. The database search yielded 1339 studies, while one additional work was identified through hand searching. After removing duplicates, 74 studies were read in full, and after resultant exclusions, 12 qualitative studies were systematically reviewed, extracted, and appraised by two reviewers independently (HAS and RT) and the third reviewer (CS) was available for any disagreement. Five analytical themes were identified: Healthcare Professional–Patient Relationship (HCP), Delivery Service, Perceived Patient Autonomy (PPA), Expectations Shape Satisfaction, and Culture Influences Satisfaction. The studies of survivors’ satisfaction, experiences, and their rehabilitative needs with the services they receive have provided different factors that influence their satisfaction during rehabilitation in different countries worldwide. However, the context in which the studies were conducted is quite limited, and more detailed studies are required for many underexplored contexts.

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

General Medicine

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