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Research Paper

Feasibility of a home-based program to improve handwriting after stroke: a pilot study

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Pages 673-682 | Received 28 Aug 2014, Accepted 03 Jun 2015, Published online: 22 Jun 2015
 

Abstract

Purpose: To test the feasibility of a handwriting retraining program with adults after stroke; specifically the feasibility of: (i) recruiting people with stroke to the study, (ii) delivering the handwriting retraining program and (iii) outcome measures of handwriting performance. Method: A quasi-experimental pre-test post-test design was used. A four-week, home-based handwriting retraining program was delivered by an occupational therapist using task-specific practice. Legibility, speed, pen control and self-perception of handwriting were measured at baseline and completion of the program. Legibility was scored by a blinded rater. Results: Seven adults with stroke were recruited (eligibility fraction 43% of those screened, and enrolment fraction 78% of those eligible). There were no dropouts. Although, recruitment was slow the intervention was feasible and acceptable to adults with stroke. No statistically or clinically significant changes in legibility were reported in this small sample, but a ceiling effect was evident for some outcome measures. The study was not powered to determine efficacy. Conclusions: Delivery of a four-week handwriting intervention with eight supervised sessions in the community was feasible; however, recruitment of an adequate sample size would require greater investment than the single site used in this pilot.

    Implications for Rehabilitation

  • Handwriting difficulty is common following hemiparesis after stroke, however research addressing handwriting retraining for adults with stroke is lacking.

  • A four-week home-based handwriting program using task-specific practice and feedback was feasible to deliver and appropriate for adults with stroke.

  • Improving handwriting legibility and neatness across a range of tasks were important goals for adults with handwriting impairment.

Declaration of interest

The study was supported by a Small Projects Grant from the National Stroke Foundation, Australia. The authors report no other declarations or conflict of interest.

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