Physiotherapy of the Trunk Related to Sitting Function After Stroke: A Delphi Study
Elizabeth Bell, Kathy Briffa, James McLoughlin, Robyn Fary

TL;DR
This study used a Delphi method to create consensus statements on trunk physiotherapy for sitting function after stroke, helping novice therapists choose effective treatments.
Contribution
The study provides specific, consensus-based treatment options for trunk physiotherapy in subacute stroke recovery.
Findings
Fourteen consensus statements were developed on trunk physiotherapy for sitting function after stroke.
Most panelists emphasized the importance of trunk physiotherapy throughout recovery stages.
Clinical observations were added to guide the implementation of the statements.
Abstract
To develop consensus statements from a Delphi panel about physiotherapy of the trunk related to sitting function for people with subacute stroke, with the express aim of facilitating treatment choices by novice physiotherapists. A four-round e-Delphi study using free-text responses and 5-point Likert scales for agreement. Twenty-six panel members with expertise in clinical and/or research in neurological rehabilitation. Round 1 consisted of 5 free-text questions. Subsequent rounds ascertained agreement and consensus on statements formulated from Round 1 responses. Consensus was defined a priori as ≥70% agreement. Round 3 presented an additional two clinical observation queries related to the statements for comment. Twenty participants completed all four rounds. Nineteen of 26 participants (73%) thought physiotherapy of the trunk was important through all stages of recovery after…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStroke Rehabilitation and Recovery · Delphi Technique in Research · Cerebral Palsy and Movement Disorders
