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Up-to-date certification of the National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale (NIHSS) and modified Rankin Scale (mRS) is often required for clinical trials, representing a significant burden on clinical investigators globally.
Aims:
This systematic review sought to determine if NIHSS or mRS training, re-training, certification or recertification led to improvements in the reliability or accuracy of ratings as well as other relevant user metrics (e.g., user confidence).
Results:
Among 4227 studies, 100 passed screening and were assessed for eligibility with full-text review; 23 met inclusion criteria. Among these 23 studies, 22 examined NIHSS training and/or certification, and only a single study included examined the effect of training on mRS performance. Ten of 23 included studies were conference abstracts. The study designs, interventions and outcome measurement of the included studies were heterogeneous. In the case of the NIHSS, two studies found increased accuracy after NIHSS training, and a third study showed statistically significant though clinically trivial decreases in error rate with training. The remaining 19 studies showed no benefit of NIHSS training as it relates to reliability or accuracy outcomes. The single included mRS study did not show the benefit of training.
Conclusion:
Although data are sparse with heterogeneous training protocols and outcomes, there is no compelling evidence to suggest benefit of healthcare professionals completing NIHSS or mRS training, certification or recertification. At the very least, recertification/re-training requirements should be reconsidered pending the provision of robust evidence.
Disabilities in physical activity and functional independence affect the early rehabilitation of stroke survivors. Moreover, a good instrument for assessing activity disability allows accurate assessment of physical disability and assists in prognosis determination.
Objective:
To compare three assessment tools for physical activity in acute-phase stroke survivors.
Methods:
We conducted this prospective observational study at an affiliated hospital of a Medical University in Shanghai, China, from June 2018 to November 2019. We administered three instruments to all patients during post-stroke days 5–7, including the Modified Barthel Index (MBI), Instrumental Activities of Daily Living (IADL), and modified Rankin scale (mRs). We analyzed correlations among the aforementioned scales and the National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale (NIHSS) using Spearman’s rank-order correlations test. Univariate analyses were performed using the Mann–Whitney U test. We used a binary logistic regression model to assess the association between the NIHSS (30 days) and patient-related variables. Finally, we used receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curves to assess the predictive value of the multivariate regression models.
Results:
There was a high correlation among the three instruments; furthermore, the MBI had a higher correlation with the NIHSS (days 5–7). The NIHSS (day 30) was correlated with thrombolysis. ROC analysis revealed that the mRs-measured disability level had the highest predictive value of short-term stroke severity (30 days).
Conclusion:
The MBI was the best scale for measuring disability in physical activity, whereas the mRs showed better accuracy in short-term prediction of stroke severity.
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