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Dive into the research topics where Malin Tistad is active.

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Featured researches published by Malin Tistad.


BMC Neurology | 2012

Unfulfilled rehabilitation needs and dissatisfaction with care 12 months after a stroke: an explorative observational study.

Malin Tistad; Kerstin Tham; Lena von Koch; Charlotte Ytterberg

BackgroundPeople who have suffered a stroke commonly report unfulfilled need for rehabilitation. Using a model of patient satisfaction, we examined characteristics in individuals that at 3 months after stroke predicted, or at 12 months were associated with unmet need for rehabilitation or dissatisfaction with health care services at 12 months after stroke.MethodsThe participants (n = 175) received care at the stroke units at the Karolinska University Hospital, Sweden. The dependent variables “unfulfilled needs for rehabilitation” and “dissatisfaction with care” were collected using a questionnaire. Stroke severity, domains of the Stroke Impact Scale (SIS), the Sense of Coherence scale (SOC) and socio demographic factors were used as independent variables in four logistic regression analyses.ResultsUnfulfilled needs for rehabilitation at 12 months were predicted by strength (SIS) (odds ratio (OR) 7.05) at three months, and associated with hand function (SIS) (OR 4.38) and poor self-rated recovery (SIS) (OR 2.46) at 12 months. Dissatisfaction with care was predicted by SOC (OR 4.18) and participation (SIS) (OR 3.78), and associated with SOC (OR 3.63) and strength (SIS) (OR 3.08).ConclusionsThirty-three percent of the participants reported unmet needs for rehabilitation and fourteen percent were dissatisfied with the care received. In order to attend to rehabilitation needs when they arise, rehabilitation services may need to be more flexible in terms of when rehabilitation is provided. Long term services with scheduled re-assessments and with more emphasis on understanding the experiences of both the patients and their social networks might better be able to provide services that attend to patients’ needs and aid peoples’ reorientation; this would apply particularly to those with poor coping capacity.


Journal of the Neurological Sciences | 2012

Poor concurrence between disabilities as described by patients and established assessment tools three months after stroke: A mixed methods approach

Malin Tistad; Charlotte Ytterberg; Kerstin Tham; Lena von Koch

BACKGROUND Disability/problems, one phenomenon underlying peoples need for health care services, can be viewed both from the perspectives of people with stroke (felt problems), and the health professionals (assessed problems). OBJECTIVE The aim was to describe felt problems three months after stroke and to explore the concurrence between felt problems and assessed problems. METHOD The patients (n=203) received care in the stroke units at Karolinska University Hospital, Sweden. Felt problems, drawn from an open question, were categorized. Results from established assessment tools: Katz Extended Index of ADL (KI); Barthel Index (BI) and Stroke Impact Scale (SIS) represented assessed problems. Items/domains in the assessment tools that corresponded to the categories of felt problems were identified and comparisons performed. RESULT The category Fatigue had the largest number of felt problems (n=58, 28%). Fourteen out of the 24 categories of felt problems had corresponding items/domains in the assessment tools. KE/BI failed to identify 16-57% and SIS 0-33% of the felt problems. CONCLUSION There was a substantial lack of concurrence between felt and assessed problems. The results indicate that the use of standardized instruments should be complemented by a dialog if health services are to be based on problems experienced by the patients.


Topics in Stroke Rehabilitation | 2012

Occupational Gaps in Everyday Life One Year After Stroke and the Association With Life Satisfaction and Impact of Stroke

Gunilla Eriksson; Monica Aasnes; Malin Tistad; Susanne Guidetti; Lena von Koch

Abstract Purpose: To examine the presence, frequency, and distribution of occupational gaps and to explore whether there are associations between occupational gaps and life satisfaction, self-rated recovery, and functioning and participation in activities of daily living (ADLs) 1 year after stroke. Method: Data were collected at onset and at 12 months after stroke from 161 patients admitted to a stroke unit in central Sweden by using Occupational Gaps Questionnaire, LiSat-11, Stroke Impact Scale, Katz ADL Index, and Barthel Index. Spearman rank correlation and Mann Whitney U test were used in the analyses. Results: Occupational gaps were reported by 87% of the participants. The number of occupational gaps was moderately associated with participation and self-rated recovery. There was a significant difference in the number of occupational gaps between the participants who were independent in ADLs and those who were not, both at baseline and at 12 months after stroke. There was, however, no significant association between occupational gaps and life satisfaction. Conclusions: Occupational gaps 1 year after stroke are very common, particularly among individuals experiencing difficulties in ADLs. Increased efforts are vital to enable individuals to do the activities that are important to them, irrespective of whether these are instrumental ADLs or leisure or social activities. Occupational gaps could be reduced by developing rehabilitation interventions that enable desired activities in different contexts that are crucial for individual patients.


Journal of Rehabilitation Medicine | 2012

PERCEIvEd oCCuPATIoNAl GAPS oNE yEAR AFTER STRokE: AN ExPloRATIvE STudy

Aileen Bergström; Susanne Guidetti; Malin Tistad; Kerstin Tham; Lena von Koch; Gunilla Eriksson

OBJECTIVE To explore and describe factors associated with occupational gaps and to identify factors at 3 months that predict occupational gaps one year post-stroke. A gap, a restriction in participation, is considered to be present when there is a discrepancy between what the individual wants to do and what they actually do in everyday life. DESIGN Prospective longitudinal study. SUBJECTS Two hundred persons with stroke. METHODS Data from the Occupational Gaps Questionnaire, one year post-stroke, was used as the dependent variable in 3- and 12-month regression analyses. Domains of the Stroke Impact Scale, global life satisfaction, demographic and medical factors were used as independent variables. RESULTS At 3 months, activities of daily living abilities, social participation and not being born in Sweden predicted occupational gaps at 12 months. Stroke severity and not being born in Sweden and 3 factors at 12 months: social participation, self-rated recovery, and global life satisfaction were associated with occupational gaps. CONCLUSION Activities of daily living ability at 3 months predicted occupational gaps after stroke. Thus, it is possible to identify early on, and provide interventions for, those that risk participation restrictions. Not being born in the country might be an indicator of a risk for participation restrictions.


BMC Health Services Research | 2017

The case of value-based healthcare for people living with complex long-term conditions

Marie Elf; Maria Flink; Marie I. Nilsson; Malin Tistad; Lena von Koch; Charlotte Ytterberg

BackgroundThere is a trend towards value-based health service, striving to cut costs while generating value for the patient. The overall objective comprises higher-quality health services and improved patient safety and cost efficiency. The approach could align with patient-centred care, as it entails a focus on the patient’s experience of her or his entire cycle of care, including the use of well-defined outcome measurements. Challenges arise when the approach is applied to health services for people living with long-term complex conditions that require support from various healthcare services. The aim of this work is to critically discuss the value-based approach and its implications for patients with long-term complex conditions. Two cases from clinical practice and research form the foundation for our reasoning, illustrating several challenges regarding value-based health services for people living with long-term complex conditions.DiscussionAchieving value-based health services that provide the health outcomes that matter to patients and providing greater patient-centredness will place increased demands on the healthcare system. Patients and their informal caregivers must be included in the development and establishment of outcome measures. The outcome measures must be standardized to allow evaluation of specific conditions at an aggregated level, but they must also be sensitive enough to capture each patient’s individual needs and goals. Healthcare systems that strive to establish value-based services must collaborate beyond the organizational boundaries to create clear patient trajectories in order to avoid fragmentation.SummaryThe shift towards value-based health services has the potential to align healthcare-service delivery with patient-centred care if serious efforts to take the patient’s perspective into account are made. This is especially challenging in fragmented healthcare systems and for patients with long-term- and multi-setting-care needs.


PLOS ONE | 2015

Usual Clinical Practice for Early Supported Discharge after Stroke with Continued Rehabilitation at Home: An Observational Comparative Study.

Malin Tistad; Lena von Koch

Introduction Based on randomised controlled trials, evidence exists that early supported discharge (ESD) from the hospital with continued rehabilitation at home has beneficial effects after stroke; however, the effects of ESD service in regular clinical practice have not been investigated. The purpose of the current study was to compare ESD service with conventional rehabilitation in terms of patient outcomes, caregiver burden at 3 and 12 months and the use and costs of healthcare during the first year after stroke. Material and Methods This study was a subgroup analysis of a longitudinal observational study of patients who received care in the stroke unit at Karolinska University Hospital in Sweden. Patients who met the inclusion criteria for ESD in previous experimental studies were included. The patients were referred to available rehabilitation services at discharge, and comparisons between those who received ESD service (the ESD group, n = 40) and those who received conventional rehabilitation (the NoESD group, n = 110) were performed with regard to independence in activities of daily living (ADL), the frequency of social activities, life satisfaction, and caregiver burden and the use and costs of healthcare during the first year after stroke. Results At 3 and 12 months, no differences were observed with regard to patient outcomes; however, ESD was associated with a lower caregiver burden (p = 0.01) at 12 months. The initial length of stay (LOS) at the hospital was 8 days for the ESD group and 15 days for the NoESD group (p = 0.02). The median number of outpatient rehabilitation contacts was 20.5 for the ESD group (81% constituting ESD service) and 3 for the NoESD group (p<0.001). There was no difference between the groups with regard to overall healthcare costs. Conclusions ESD service in usual clinical practice renders similar health benefits as conventional rehabilitation but a different pattern of resource use and with released capacity in acute stroke care.


BMC Health Services Research | 2015

Assessing feasibility and acceptability of study procedures: getting ready for implementation of national stroke guidelines in out-patient health care

Susanne Palmcrantz; Malin Tistad; Ann Catrine Eldh; Lotta Widén Holmqvist; Anna Ehrenberg; Göran Tomson; Christina Olsson; Lars Wallin

BackgroundEven though Swedish national guidelines for stroke care (SNGSC) have been accessible for nearly a decade access to stroke rehabilitation in out-patient health care vary considerably. In order to aid future interventions studies for implementation of SNGSC, this study assessed the feasibility and acceptability of study procedures including analysis of the context in out-patient health care settings.MethodsThe feasibility and acceptability of recruitment, observations and interviews with managers, staff and patients were assessed, as well as the feasibility of surveying health care records.ResultsTo identify patients from the the hospitals was feasible but not from out-patient care where a need to relieve clinical staff of the recruitment process was identified. Assessing adherence to guidelines and standardized evaluations of patient outcomes through health care records was found to be feasible and suitable assessment tools to evaluate patient outcome were identified. Interviews were found to be a feasible and acceptable tool to survey the context of the health care setting.ConclusionIn this feasibility study a variety of qualitative and quantitative data collection procedures and measures were tested. The results indicate what can be used as a set of feasible and acceptable data collection procedures and suitable measures for studying implementation of stroke guidelines in an out-patient health care context.


Health Expectations | 2013

What aspects of rehabilitation provision contribute to self-reported met needs for rehabilitation one year after stroke - amount, place, operator or timing?

Malin Tistad; Lena von Koch; Christina Sjöstrand; Kerstin Tham; Charlotte Ytterberg

To a large extent, people who have suffered a stroke report unmet needs for rehabilitation. The purpose of this study was to explore aspects of rehabilitation provision that potentially contribute to self‐reported met needs for rehabilitation 12 months after stroke with consideration also to severity of stroke.


Topics in Stroke Rehabilitation | 2012

Shorter Length of Stay in the Stroke Unit: Comparison Between the 1990s and 2000s

Malin Tistad; Charlotte Ytterberg; Christina Sjöstrand; Lotta Widén Holmqvist; Lena von Koch

Abstract Purpose: The process ruling length of stay (LOS) in hospitals is complex, and changes over time in LOS have not been explored. The purpose of the study was to examine differences in LOS, use of and satisfaction with health-related services, and capacity in activities of daily living (ADLs) during the first year post stroke in 2 groups of patients with mild to moderate stroke who received care in the same stroke unit. Method: The patients (1993/96, n=40; 2006/07, n=43) in this study received care in the stroke unit at Karolinska University Hospital, Huddinge, Sweden. Data on LOS and on the use of health-related services were collected from the Stockholm County Council computerized registers. Satisfaction with healthrelated services was assessed using a questionnaire covering different dimensions of care, while ADLs were assessed using Katz Extended Index of ADL. Results: The LOS in the stroke unit was shorter in the 2006–2007 group (median 8 days) compared to the 1993–1996 group (13 days) (P < .001). Both groups were equally satisfied with health-related services received. A larger proportion of patients were independent in ADLs 3 months post stroke in the 2006–2007 group, but no difference was seen at 6 or 12 months post stroke. Conclusion: It seems possible to reduce the number of days spent in the stroke unit after mild to moderate stroke and instead spend days in a rehabilitation unit, and yet achieve similar patient satisfaction and faster recovery in ADL.


BMJ Open | 2018

Resource use of healthcare services 1 year after stroke : a secondary analysis of a cluster-randomised controlled trial of a client-centred activities of daily living intervention.

Malin Tistad; Maria Flink; Charlotte Ytterberg; Gunilla Eriksson; Susanne Guidetti; Kerstin Tham; Lena von Koch

Objective The objective of the study was to compare the total use of healthcare services in the course of the first year after a stroke between participants who, after the acute care, had received occupational therapy as a client-centred activities of daily living (ADL) intervention (CADL) and participants who had received usual ADL intervention (UADL). Design A secondary analysis of a multicentre cluster-randomised controlled trial (RCT). Setting Primary and secondary care in Sweden. Participants Participants were included if they: (1) had received CADL or UADL in the RCT, either as inpatients in geriatric rehabilitation units or in their own homes, and (2) data could be retrieved about their use of healthcare services provided by the county council from computerised registers. Interventions CADL or UADL. Outcome measures Inpatient and outpatient healthcare in the course of the first year after stroke. Results Participants from 7 of the 16 units included in the RCT met the criteria. Participants in the CADL group (n=26) who received geriatric inpatient rehabilitation had a shorter length of hospital stay (p=0.03) than participants in the UADL group (n=46), and the CADL group with home rehabilitation (n=13) had fewer outpatient contacts (p=0.01) compared with the UADL group (n=25). Multiple regression analyses showed that in four of the models, a higher age was associated with a lower use of healthcare services. The use of healthcare services was also associated (some of the models) with dependence in ADL, stroke severity and type of rehabilitation received, CADL or UADL. Conclusions The provision of client-centred occupational therapy after stroke did not appear to increase the use of healthcare services during the first year after stroke.rrrrr Trial registration number NCT01417585.

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Charlotte Ytterberg

Karolinska University Hospital

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Christina Sjöstrand

Karolinska University Hospital

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Maria Flink

Karolinska University Hospital

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