Rehabilitation Strategies for Social Participation in Chronic Stroke Survivors
University of Pittsburgh
Summary
The goal of this clinical trial is to test a new rehabilitation program, combining acceptance and commitment therapy with strategy training (ACES), to help people resume social participation after stroke and live in the community. Investigators will also compare the changes in social participation and psychological flexibility from baseline to follow-up at one-month after rehabilitation to see if participants who receive ACES report clinically meaningful improvements (Cohen's d=0.2 or greater) compared to the existing rehabilitation program using strategy training alone (START). Participants will: * complete testing to see if they are eligible for the study. If qualified, complete testing to understand how the stroke has affected their daily life * be randomized to receive either ACES or START rehabilitation program for 10 sessions at their home * repeat part of the tests at the end of the intervention and one month after
Description
In April 2025, the investigator changed the recruitment status because the first enrolled participant ended up being ineligible. The investigators also updated eligibility criteria and outcome measures to be consistent with the IRB protocol. In June 2025, the investigator received notice of award from NIH and thus updated information to be consistent with the IRB protocol.
Eligibility
- Age range
- 18+ years
- Sex
- All
- Healthy volunteers
- No
Inclusion Criteria: 1. primary diagnosis of chronic stroke, ≥6 months post onset, 2. ≥18 years old, 3. community-dwelling (i.e., living in a residential setting in the community), 4. restrictions in social participation, indicated by Activity Card Sort (\<80% of pre-stroke activities) Exclusion Criteria: 1. progressive neurological diagnosis (e.g., dementia, Parkinson's disease, multiple sclerosis, or brain tumor) reported by participants or proxy, 2. inability to provide written informed consent, 3. severe aphasia (score 0 or 1 on the Boston Diagnostic Aphasia Examination 3rd Edition Sever…
Interventions
- BehavioralStrategy Training Only
Participants will receive ten 45-60-minute sessions (two times per week) in person in their residence to address real-world performance with an emphasis on START strategy, task-specific practice, and guided discovery to perform social participation activities. In session 1, participants will be guided to select 3 to 5 meaningful social activities and prioritize them. In sessions 2 - 9, participants will use structured START strategy worksheet to try the selected activity; assess execution (e.g., what went well, what did not); reflect on a plan with specific strategies and to address identified challenges; and try social participation activities again. The interventionist will use guided discovery to support START strategy application and to elicit problem solving skills. This process will be repeated iteratively across sessions. In session 10, participants will summarize lessons learned and generate an action plan for after the intervention.
- BehavioralStrategy Training embedded with Acceptance and Commitment Therapy Principles
Participants will receive ten 45-60-minute sessions (two times per week) in person in their residence to address real-world performance with task-specific practice and an emphasis on psychological processes using ACT principles. In session 1, participants will clarify value-consistent social participation goals for engaging in 3-5 meaningful activities ("Do What Matters"). In sessions 2-9, participants will be guided applying ACT principles to cope with negative experiences and separate self from thoughts and feelings ("Open Up") and practice mindfulness, stimulate awareness, recognize same person with different experiences, and build self-compassion ("Be Present"). This process (i.e., try an activity that aligns with values and committed actions; assess performance; and reflect on a plan) will be repeated iteratively. In session 10, participants reflect on lessons learned and generate an action plan for after the intervention.
Location
- University of PittsburghPittsburgh, Pennsylvania