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Dive into the research topics where Randie M. Black-Schaffer is active.

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Featured researches published by Randie M. Black-Schaffer.


Stroke | 2007

Comparison of Clinical Characteristics and Functional Outcomes of Ischemic Stroke in Different Vascular Territories

Yee Sien Ng; Joel Stein; MingMing Ning; Randie M. Black-Schaffer

Background and Purpose— We aim to compare demographics and functional outcomes of patients with stroke in a variety of vascular territories who underwent inpatient rehabilitation. Such comparative data are important in functional prognostication, rehabilitation, and healthcare planning, but literature is scarce and isolated. Methods— Using data collected prospectively over a 9-year period, we studied 2213 individuals who sustained first-ever ischemic strokes and were admitted to an inpatient stroke rehabilitation program. Strokes were divided into anterior cerebral artery, middle cerebral artery (MCA), posterior cerebral artery, brain stem, cerebellar, small-vessel strokes, and strokes occurring in more than one vascular territory. The main functional outcome measure was the Functional Independence Measure (FIM). Repeated-measures analysis of covariance with post hoc analyses was used to compare functional outcomes of the stroke groups. Results— The most common stroke groups were MCA stroke (50.8%) and small-vessel stroke (12.8%). After adjustments for age, gender, risk factors, and admission year, the stroke groups can be arranged from most to least severe disability on admission: strokes in more than one vascular territory, MCA, anterior cerebral artery, posterior cerebral artery, brain stem, cerebellar, and small-vessel strokes. The sequence was similar on discharge, except cerebellar strokes had the least disability rather than small-vessel strokes. Hemispheric (more than one vascular territory, MCA, anterior cerebral artery, posterior cerebral artery) strokes collectively have significantly lower admission and discharge total and cognitive FIM scores compared with the other stroke groups. MCA stroke had the lowest FIM efficiency and cerebellar stroke the highest. Regardless, patients with stroke made significant (P<0.001) and approximately equal (P=0.535) functional gains in all groups. Higher admission motor and cognitive FIM scores, longer rehabilitation stay, younger patients, lower number of medical complications, and a year of admission after 2000 were associated with higher discharge total FIM scores on multiple regression analysis. Conclusions— Patients with stroke made significant functional gains and should be offered rehabilitation regardless of stroke vascular territory. The initial functional status at admission, rather than the stroke subgroup, better predicts discharge functional outcomes postrehabilitation.


Archives of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation | 2006

Computerized Adaptive Testing for Follow-Up After Discharge From Inpatient Rehabilitation: II. Participation Outcomes

Stephen M. Haley; Barbara Gandek; Hilary Siebens; Randie M. Black-Schaffer; Samuel J. Sinclair; Wei Tao; Wendy J. Coster; Pengsheng Ni; Alan M. Jette

OBJECTIVES To measure participation outcomes with a computerized adaptive test (CAT) and compare CAT and traditional fixed-length surveys in terms of score agreement, respondent burden, discriminant validity, and responsiveness. DESIGN Longitudinal, prospective cohort study of patients interviewed approximately 2 weeks after discharge from inpatient rehabilitation and 3 months later. SETTING Follow-up interviews conducted in patients home setting. PARTICIPANTS Adults (N=94) with diagnoses of neurologic, orthopedic, or medically complex conditions. INTERVENTIONS Not applicable. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES Participation domains of mobility, domestic life, and community, social, & civic life, measured using a CAT version of the Participation Measure for Postacute Care (PM-PAC-CAT) and a 53-item fixed-length survey (PM-PAC-53). RESULTS The PM-PAC-CAT showed substantial agreement with PM-PAC-53 scores (intraclass correlation coefficient, model 3,1, .71-.81). On average, the PM-PAC-CAT was completed in 42% of the time and with only 48% of the items as compared with the PM-PAC-53. Both formats discriminated across functional severity groups. The PM-PAC-CAT had modest reductions in sensitivity and responsiveness to patient-reported change over a 3-month interval as compared with the PM-PAC-53. CONCLUSIONS Although continued evaluation is warranted, accurate estimates of participation status and responsiveness to change for group-level analyses can be obtained from CAT administrations, with a sizeable reduction in respondent burden.


Topics in Stroke Rehabilitation | 2004

Age and Functional Outcome After Stroke

Randie M. Black-Schaffer; Cynthia Winston

Abstract The effect of age on functional outcome after stroke remains uncertain. Many studies have found that younger patients do better than older patients, whereas others have found minimal or no effect of age on rehabilitation outcomes. We examined the effect of advancing age on FIM™ gain, length of stay, length of stay efficiency, and home discharge in 979 stroke rehabilitation patients at a long-term acute care rehabilitation hospital. We found a strong relationship of increasing age to poorer outcome in all measures for patients with admission FIM (AFIM) score <40, a variable relationship in those with AFIM 40–80, and no relationship of age to the outcome measures in patients with AFIM >80.


Archives of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation | 1999

Stroke rehabilitation. 2. Co-morbidities and complications.

Randie M. Black-Schaffer; Andrew Kirsteins; Richard L. Harvey

This self-directed learning module highlights new advances in the understanding of co-morbid conditions and medical complications of stroke. It is part of the chapter on stroke rehabilitation in the Self-Directed Physiatric Education Program for practitioners and trainees in physical medicine and rehabilitation. This article covers co-morbid conditions of stroke patients, including cardiovascular disease, diabetes, and sleep apnea. It reviews recent information on complications of stroke, including deep venous thrombosis, dysphagia and aspiration, hospital-acquired infections, depression, falls, spasticity, shoulder pain, and seizures. Treatment advances in diabetes, depression, and spasticity are highlighted. Recent information is presented regarding exercise guidelines for the stroke patient with cardiovascular disease, the relationship between stroke and sleep apnea, prophylaxis of deep venous thrombosis, the changing spectrum of hospital-acquired infections, malnutrition in stroke patients, the problem of falls during rehabilitation, the evaluation and management of poststroke shoulder pain, and the risk of seizures after stroke.


Neuromodulation | 2012

Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation as an Investigative Tool for Motor Dysfunction and Recovery in Stroke: An Overview for Neurorehabilitation Clinicians

Mar Cortes; Randie M. Black-Schaffer; Dylan J. Edwards

Rationale:  An improved understanding of motor dysfunction and recovery after stroke has important clinical implications that may lead to the design of more effective rehabilitation strategies for patients with hemiparesis.


Neuroscience Letters | 2014

Combination of transcranial direct current stimulation and methylphenidate in subacute stroke

Qing Mei Wang; Huashun Cui; Soo Jeong Han; Randie M. Black-Schaffer; Magdalena Sarah Volz; Yong-Tae Lee; Seth Herman; Lydia Abul Latif; Ross Zafonte; Felipe Fregni

Noninvasive transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) and methylphenidate (MP) are associated with motor recovery after stroke. Based on the potentially complementary mechanisms of these interventions, we examined whether there is an interactive effect between MP and tDCS. In this preliminary study, we randomized subacute stroke subjects to receive tDCS alone, MP alone or combination of tDCS and MP. A blinded rater measured safety, hand function, and cortical excitability before and after treatment. None of the treatments caused any major or severe adverse effects or induced significant differences in cortical excitability. Analysis of variance of gain score, as measured by Purdue pegboard test, showed a significant between-group difference (F(2,6)=12.167, p=0.008). Post hoc analysis showed that the combination treatment effected greater Purdue pegboard gain scores than tDCS alone (p=0.017) or MP alone (p=0.01). Our preliminary data with nine subjects shows an interesting dissociation between motor function improvement and lack of motor corticospinal plasticity changes as indexed by transcranial magnetic stimulation in subacute stroke subjects.


Topics in Stroke Rehabilitation | 2004

Computer Adaptive Testing: A Strategy for Monitoring Stroke Rehabilitation Across Settings

Patricia L. Andres; Randie M. Black-Schaffer; Pengsheng Ni; Stephen M. Haley

Abstract Current functional assessment instruments in stroke rehabilitation are often setting-specific and lack precision, breadth, and/or feasibility. Computer adaptive testing (CAT) offers a promising potential solution by providing a quick, yet precise, measure of function that can be used across a broad range of patient abilities and in multiple settings. CAT technology yields a precise score by selecting very few relevant items from a large and diverse item pool based on each individual’s responses. We demonstrate the potential usefulness of a CAT assessment model with a cross-sectional sample of persons with stroke from multiple rehabilitation settings.


Topics in Stroke Rehabilitation | 1994

Vocational outcome after stroke

Randie M. Black-Schaffer; Lori Lemieux

This article reviews the literature on vocational outcome after stroke and discusses reasons for the minimal use of vocational outcome measures in stroke rehabilitation research. A vocational function measurement tool is proposed. The vocational rehabilitation process and experience of the Young Stroke Program at New England Rehabilitation Hospital are described, and determinants of success or failure in vocational rehabilitation after stroke as described in the medical literature are reviewed. The impact of the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990 and of changes in health care funding on vocational outcomes after stroke are discussed.


PLOS ONE | 2015

Functional Status Predicts Acute Care Readmissions from Inpatient Rehabilitation in the Stroke Population.

Chloe Slocum; Paul Gerrard; Randie M. Black-Schaffer; Richard A. Goldstein; Aneesh B. Singhal; Margaret A. DiVita; Colleen M. Ryan; Jacqueline Mix; Maulik Purohit; Paulette Niewczyk; Lewis E. Kazis; Ross Zafonte; Jeffrey C. Schneider

Objective Acute care readmission risk is an increasingly recognized problem that has garnered significant attention, yet the reasons for acute care readmission in the inpatient rehabilitation population are complex and likely multifactorial. Information on both medical comorbidities and functional status is routinely collected for stroke patients participating in inpatient rehabilitation. We sought to determine whether functional status is a more robust predictor of acute care readmissions in the inpatient rehabilitation stroke population compared with medical comorbidities using a large, administrative data set. Methods A retrospective analysis of data from the Uniform Data System for Medical Rehabilitation from the years 2002 to 2011 was performed examining stroke patients admitted to inpatient rehabilitation facilities. A Basic Model for predicting acute care readmission risk based on age and functional status was compared with models incorporating functional status and medical comorbidities (Basic-Plus) or models including age and medical comorbidities alone (Age-Comorbidity). C-statistics were compared to evaluate model performance. Findings There were a total of 803,124 patients: 88,187 (11%) patients were transferred back to an acute hospital: 22,247 (2.8%) within 3 days, 43,481 (5.4%) within 7 days, and 85,431 (10.6%) within 30 days. The C-statistics for the Basic Model were 0.701, 0.672, and 0.682 at days 3, 7, and 30 respectively. As compared to the Basic Model, the best-performing Basic-Plus model was the Basic+Elixhauser model with C-statistics differences of +0.011, +0.011, and + 0.012, and the best-performing Age-Comorbidity model was the Age+Elixhauser model with C-statistic differences of -0.124, -0.098, and -0.098 at days 3, 7, and 30 respectively. Conclusions Readmission models for the inpatient rehabilitation stroke population based on functional status and age showed better predictive ability than models based on medical comorbidities.


American Journal of Physical Medicine & Rehabilitation | 2006

Agreement in functional assessment: graphic approaches to displaying respondent effects.

Stephen M. Haley; Pengsheng Ni; Wendy J. Coster; Randie M. Black-Schaffer; Hilary Siebens; Wei Tao

Haley SM, Ni P, Coster WJ, Black-Schaffer R, Siebens H, Tao W: Agreement in functional assessment: graphic approaches to displaying respondent effects. Am J Phys Med Rehabil 2006;85:747–755. Objective:The objective of this study was to examine the agreement between respondents of summary scores from items representing three functional content areas (physical and mobility, personal care and instrumental, applied cognition) within the Activity Measure for Postacute Care (AM-PAC). We compare proxy vs. patient report in both hospital and community settings as represented by intraclass correlation coefficients and two graphic approaches. Design:The authors conducted a prospective, cohort study of a convenience sample of adults (n = 47) receiving rehabilitation services either in hospital (n = 31) or community (n = 16) settings. In addition to using intraclass correlation coefficients (ICC) as indices of agreement, we applied two graphic approaches to serve as complements to help interpret the direction and magnitude of respondent disagreements. We created a “mountain plot” based on a cumulative distribution curve and a “survival-agreement plot” with step functions used in the analysis of survival data. Results:ICCs on summary scores between patient and proxy report were physical and mobility ICC = 0.92, personal care and instrumental ICC = 0.93, and applied cognition ICC = 0.77. Although combined respondent agreement was acceptable, graphic approaches helped interpret differences in separate analyses of clinician and family agreement. Conclusions:Graphic analyses allow for a simple interpretation of agreement data and may be useful in determining the meaningfulness of the amount and direction of interrespondent variation.

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Ross Zafonte

Spaulding Rehabilitation Hospital

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Catherine Adans-Dester

Spaulding Rehabilitation Hospital

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Paolo Bonato

Spaulding Rehabilitation Hospital

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Sunghoon Lee

University of Massachusetts Amherst

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Shyamal Patel

Spaulding Rehabilitation Hospital

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Chloe Slocum

Spaulding Rehabilitation Hospital

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