Skip to main content

Research Repository

Advanced Search

Criteria and indicators for Centers of Clinical Excellence in stroke recovery and rehabilitation: A global consensus facilitated by ISRRA Article type: Research

Stockley, R C; Walker, M F; Alt Murphy, M; Abd Aziz, N A; Amooba, P; Churliov, L; Farrin, A; Fini, N A; Ghaziani, E; Godecke, E; Gutierrez-Panchana, T; Jia, J; Kandasamy, T; Lindsay, P; Solomon, J; Thijs, V; Tindall, T; Tippett, D C; Watkins, C; Lynch, E

Criteria and indicators for Centers of Clinical Excellence in stroke recovery and rehabilitation: A global consensus facilitated by ISRRA Article type: Research Thumbnail


Authors

R C Stockley

M F Walker

M Alt Murphy

N A Abd Aziz

P Amooba

L Churliov

A Farrin

N A Fini

E Ghaziani

E Godecke

T Gutierrez-Panchana

J Jia

T Kandasamy

P Lindsay

J Solomon

V Thijs

T Tindall

D C Tippett

C Watkins

E Lynch



Abstract

Background
The aim of the International Stroke Recovery and Rehabilitation Alliance is to create a world where worldwide collaboration brings major breakthroughs for the millions of people living with stroke. A key pillar of this work is to define globally relevant criteria for centers that aspire to deliver excellent clinical rehabilitation and generate exceptional outcomes for patients.
Objectives
This paper presents consensus work conducted with an international group of expert stroke recovery and rehabilitation researchers, clinicians, and people living with stroke to identify and define criteria and measurable indicators for Centers of Clinical Excellence (CoCE) in stroke recovery and rehabilitation. These were intentionally developed to be ambitious and internationally relevant, regardless of a country’s development or income status, to drive global improvement in stroke services.
Methods
Criteria and specific measurable indicators for CoCE were collaboratively developed by an international panel of stroke recovery and rehabilitation experts from 10 countries and consumer groups from 5 countries.
Results
The criteria and associated indicators, ranked in order of importance, focused upon (i) optimal outcome, (ii) research culture, (iii) working collaboratively with people living with stroke, (iv) knowledge exchange, (v) leadership, (vi) education, and (vii) advocacy. Work is currently underway to user-test the criteria and indicators in 14 rehabilitation centers in 10 different countries.
Conclusions
We anticipate that use of the criteria and indicators could support individual organizations to further develop their services and, more widely, provide a mechanism by which clinical excellence can be articulated and shared to generate global improvements in stroke care.

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Nov 30, 2023
Online Publication Date Jan 11, 2024
Publication Date 2024-02
Deposit Date Jan 17, 2024
Publicly Available Date Jan 17, 2024
Journal Neurorehabilitation and Neural Repair
Print ISSN 1545-9683
Publisher SAGE Publications
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 38
Issue 2
Pages 87-98
DOI https://doi.org/10.1177/15459683231222026
Public URL https://nottingham-repository.worktribe.com/output/29833222
Publisher URL https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/15459683231222026

Files





Downloadable Citations