# Promoting community and social participation in chronic stroke: A pilot study of the ENGAGE intervention

**Authors:** Elizabeth Skidmore, Carolyn Baum, Jessica Kersey, Emily Kringle, Kelsey Voltz-Poremba, Sular Gordon, Tina Harris, Heidi Fischer, Maureen Gecht, Michelle Furman, Joy Hammel

PMC · DOI: 10.1016/j.dhjo.2025.101974 · Disability and health journal · 2025-11-25

## TL;DR

A new intervention called ENGAGE helps stroke survivors improve their community and social participation through collaborative problem-solving and practice.

## Contribution

ENGAGE is a novel community-based intervention combining social learning and guided problem-solving to address post-stroke social participation challenges.

## Key findings

- ENGAGE had a 90% retention rate with high participant satisfaction and no injuries reported.
- Participants showed a medium effect size improvement in community and social participation outcomes.

## Abstract

Survivors of stroke report low levels of community and social participation, even years after stroke. ENGAGE is a community-based intervention that merges social learning, guided problem solving, and supervised practice to collaboratively identify, generate, and apply solutions to challenges with community and social participation after stroke.

We examined the feasibility, acceptability, and safety of ENGAGE and characterized within group changes in community and social participation outcomes.

Community-dwelling survivors of stroke, occupational therapy providers, and occupational therapy scientists partnered to co-design the essential and structural elements of ENGAGE, as well as to evaluate ENGAGE using a multi-site single-arm community-based phase 2a clinical trial design. The 6-week ENGAGE program was co-facilitated by survivors of stroke acting as peer mentors and occupational therapy provider through in-person (Phase I, 12 sessions) or virtual web conference meetings (Phase II, 9 sessions). Feasibility was assessed through participant retention, engagement, acceptability, satisfaction, and safety. Within group change was assessed through the PROMIS Ability to Participation in Social Roles and Activities Scale.

Of the 42 participants providing consent, 38 were eligible, and 30 started the intervention program. Retention in the ENGAGE program was 90 % (n = 27). Of these, 85 % engaged actively, 87 % indicated very high satisfaction, and 0 % reported injuries or injurious falls. Participants achieved a medium within group effect size of change in community and social participation (d = 0.38, 95 % CI = −0.11, 0.94).

ENGAGE appears to be a feasible and promising intervention to promote improvements in community and social participation in community-dwelling survivors of stroke.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** stroke (MONDO:0005098)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** injuries (MESH:D014947), chronic stroke (MESH:D020521)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

48 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12643107/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12643107