Poststroke visual impairment (VI) affects between 30% and 85% of stroke survivors and includes manifestations of diplopia, homonymous visual field loss, visual neglect, and oscillopsia.Reference Hepworth, Howard, Hanna, Currie and Rowe1–Reference Rowe, Hepworth, Howard, Hanna, Cheyne and Currie3 Poststroke VI may be permanent or transitory.Reference Rowe, Hepworth, Howard, Hanna, Cheyne and Currie3 VI, even short term, can negatively affect survivors’ quality of life, psychological health, socialization, safety, rehabilitation potential, and functional status.Reference Leissner, Coenen, Froehlich, Loyola and Cieza4–Reference Sand, Midelfart, Thomassen, Melms, Wilhelm and Hoff6 In acute care, VI diagnosis and management are often suboptimal.Reference Overbury and Wittich7 Previous reports demonstrated failure to identify poststroke VI as hindering access to vision rehabilitation.Reference Overbury and Wittich7,Reference Fraser, Johnson, Wittich and Overbury8 The 2011 Montreal Barriers study found that only 54% of 702 low-vision patients were referred to, and received, publicly funded vision rehabilitation.Reference Overbury and Wittich7 In a systematic review of patient-perceived barriers to low-vision services, lack of awareness, provider miscommunications, and prohibitive costs were identified as obstacles to care.Reference Lam and Leat9 Rowe and colleagues found that UK stroke survivors with poststroke VI reported inadequate support for their VI and cited lack of information about the implications of VI as detriments to their care.Reference Rowe10 In this study, we sought to (a) investigate the perspectives of stroke survivors and care providers on poststroke VI care in Alberta, and (b) determine whether patient demographics (gender, ethnicity, education, and area of residence) or provider discipline influenced perceptions of poststroke VI care delivery.
This cross-sectional observational study was approved by the institutional ethics board at the University of Calgary, and participants provided written informed consent. Two online surveys captured stroke survivor and provider perspectives pertaining to poststroke VI care. Adult stroke survivors who could read and understand English were eligible for inclusion, unless they were medically unstable or unable to communicate informed consent (due to communication or cognitive abilities). Certified professionals in disciplines of allied health (e.g. occupational therapy, physical therapy), ophthalmology, vision care specialists (e.g. optometry, orthoptists), stroke, neurology, and physical medicine and rehabilitation met inclusion criteria as providers.
Surveys were codesigned with a multidisciplinary, provincial stakeholder group (including patients, physicians, nurses, allied health professionals, orthoptists, and optometrists). Survey content was derived from qualitative findings in this study population (n = 50 participants), cognitive interviews (n = 12), and accessibility testing. Survivor surveys were designed for online (REDCap, 10 min) or phone (30 min) implementation; provider surveys were online only. Survivors were questioned regarding stroke history; impact of stroke on visual function; experiences in health service utilization; engagement with care professionals across the care continuum; perceptions regarding aspects of the poststroke VI care experience during screening, clinical management and rehabilitation; and perceived utility of a provincial action to remedy care gaps. Provider surveys investigated perceptions of care delivery across the care continuum. All participants were asked to identify their top 3–5 priorities for provincial action. Provider and survivor survey data were analyzed separately, but brought together in final narrative synthesis. Data were analyzed descriptively, with means, medians, and standard deviations. Continuous survey variables (e.g. age) described using means and standard deviations if approximately normal and symmetrical, and otherwise were presented as medians with 25th and 75th percentiles. For analysis of 5-point Likert scale questions, we collapsed responses into two categories: Agree (including Agree and Strongly Agree) and Disagree (including Neither Agree or Disagree, Disagree, and Strongly Disagree) and presented these as percentages.
Twelve care teams participated in this study, representing acute in-patient stroke care (n = 1), inpatient rehabilitation (n = 3), homecare (n = 3), and outpatient care settings (n = 5). Forty-six stroke survivors (response rate 82.1%) and 87 care providers completed surveys between May and August 2021. The survivor respondents were on average (SD) 62.58 (10.83) years old; most were married (78.3%), of white European descent (67.4%), and not engaged in the work force (28.3% not employed, 50.0% retired). Survivors were predominantly from metropolitan-urban (>100,000 people) communities, (54.4%) moreso than rural (<10,000 people) (30.4%) regions. The mean (SD) number of strokes individually experienced was 1.17 (0.44), with a mean (SD) of 26.9 (38.5) months since their initial event. Most survivors (93.5%) reported poststroke VI in this convenience sample. Provider respondents (n = 62) were on average 43.9 (11.2) years. Most providers were male (54.1%) and lived in metropolitan-urban populations (58.6%). These respondents included allied health professionals (48.3%), vision care specialists (ophthalmology or optometry) (10.3%), neurologists (3.4%), and nurses (3.4%). Providers worked in inpatient rehabilitation (26.4%), homecare (13.8%), community-outpatient care (12.6%), and acute care (10.3%). Nearly half of providers were involved in screening for poststroke VI (42.5%), while slightly more (56.3%) were involved in poststroke VI management or rehabilitation.
For stroke-survivor respondents (Table 1), the most-frequently noted symptoms of poststroke VIs included visual field deficits (69.6%), blurred or altered vision (50.0%), reading difficulties (37.0%), inability to drive (32.6%), difficulty recognizing things (21.7%), eye fatigue (17.4%), and light sensitivity (17.4%). The mean (SD) number of symptoms experienced by patients was 3.34 (2.15), with 3 (6.5%) respondents indicating 0 symptoms, 4 (8.7%) indicating 1 symptoms, and 39 (84.8%) respondents indicating more than 1 symptom. Patients varied on care settings where they received care poststroke, with most receiving acute inpatient (67.4%), community outpatient (rehabilitation or vision care) (52.2%), and inpatient rehabilitation (50.0%). While 93.5% of survivors experienced poststroke VI, only 67.3% reported receiving treatment, management, or rehabilitation services. For those who received care, most-frequently noted services were provided within 1 month (45.2%) poststroke. The most-frequently noted management entailed noncomputer scanning therapy (39.1%), computer therapy (32.6%), reading strategies (26.1%), compensation strategies (23.9%), mobility strategies (21.7%), and prism glasses (15.2%). Survivors reported difficulties accessing educational resources (58.1%) and contested resource appropriateness (51.6%), poststroke.
Note: Total of 46 survivor respondents and 87 provider respondents.
Few survivors were satisfied with their inpatient rehabilitation care for poststroke VI (34.8%) or the timeliness of care received in acute care settings (29.0%). We report satisfaction as a range across the four care settings where stroke survivors experienced care: acute care, inpatient rehabilitation, home care, and outpatient community care. Few survivors felt confident in the level of interprofessional collaboration (38.7–34.8%), adequacy of referral processes (32.3–39.1%), ease of finding educational resources (29.0–30.4%), or the appropriateness of educational resources they received (29.0–26.1%) in either inpatient stroke or rehabilitation settings. For those accessing care in inpatient rehabilitation wards (26.1%) and home care settings (40.0%), few survivors reported using available educational resources. Survivor perceptions regarding poststroke VI care did not vary with gender, ethnicity, or educational level. Survivor perceptions did vary with geography: the perceived adequacy of community resources was higher in regional and rural areas (100% or 83.3% agree, respectively) compared to urban areas (43.7% agree; Kruskal–Wallis test statistic 6.31 (p = 0.043)). Survivors were more likely to report being referred to the appropriate professional in a timely manner in regional and rural areas (100% and 91.7% agree, respectively) compared to urban areas (50.0% agree; Kruskal–Wallis test statistic 6.907 (p = 0.032)). Stroke survivors supported the establishment of a provincial, system-level working group to address gaps in health service delivery for poststroke VI (82.3%). Amongst 11 potential activities targeting improvement, survivors prioritized (1) advancing care provision for VI poststroke (mean priority 3.31); (2) better supporting the return to driving process (mean priority 3.34); and (3) better professional training (mean priority 3.39).
For 75.7% and 67.6% of provider respondents, the adequacy of communication pathways and referral processes for screening and diagnosis were lacking, respectively. Providers expressed high levels of agreement in feeling confident in providing poststroke VI screening (81.0% agreed). In management and rehabilitation of poststroke VI, most providers disagreed about their confidence in, or perceived adequacy of, community organizations (63.3%), communication pathways (79.6%), referral processes (83.7%), an evidence-based approach (63.3%), available professional training (65.3%), ease of finding educational resources (81.6%), appropriateness of educational resources (87.8%), and available clinical resources (83.7%). Provider perceptions varied (p < 0.05) with profession. Around screening and diagnosis, allied health professions disagreed more than medical specialists about the appropriateness of processes used to confirm diagnoses (65.3% vs. 5.9% disagreed, p = 0.006), the reliability of communication pathways (87.0% vs. 54.5% disagreed, p = 0.046), and adequacy of available clinical resources (73.9% vs. 27.3% disagreed, p = 0.018). Allied health professionals, medical specialists (including ophthalmologists), and vision care specialists (including optometry) varied in satisfaction with adequacy of community organizations (p = 0.018), scope of practice of different professions (p = 0.030), communication pathways (p = 0.015), and referral processes (p = 0.007). Amongst 15 potential activities for provincial action, provider-respondents prioritized (1) advancing care provision for VI poststroke (mean priority 4.23); (2) professional training (mean priority 4.53); (3) improving referral processes (mean priority 4.69); (4) developing patient and family educational resources (mean priority 4.72); and (5) promoting interprofessional communication (mean priority 4.83).
In-patient settings and urban care centers were rated worse with respect to perceived adequacy, appropriateness, and timeliness in care provision for management of poststroke VI. These settings are encountered early on the care continuum for many patients, which suggests an earlier opportunity to identify, intervene, and support stroke survivors’ needs. Many stroke survivors felt unprepared to deal with their VI when leaving hospital-based settings. Our study highlighted gaps in care implicit to the inpatient environment. Previous studies have described more social, or nonhealth-specific, challenges such as mobility and transportation that are often perceived as beyond the health system’s purview. Those barriers played a lower role in this study examining the full care continuum.
The majority of survivor and provider respondents, as in other jurisdictions, called for provincial action to address gaps in poststroke VI care.Reference Jaiswal, Santhakumaran, Walker, Sukhai, Packer and Kessler11–Reference Rowe, Hepworth, Howard, Hanna and Helliwell14 In the UK, unmet needs for poststroke VI were attributed to absent treatment protocols (9%), limited use of screening tools to detect post-stroke VI (22%), and inadequate educational material available for patients or caregivers (33.5%).Reference Rowe, Walker and Rockliffe13 Rowe et al then co-designed a stroke-VI care pathway using a literature review and two focus groups with care providers and survivors.Reference Rowe, Hepworth, Howard, Hanna and Helliwell14 The subsequent pathway focused on how (and when) survivors present with VI; what relevance different types of VI have to vision services; how support services supplement inpatient care; and the import of resources to advance awareness of post-stroke VI.Reference Rowe, Hepworth, Howard, Hanna and Helliwell14 In Norway, a structured visual assessment tool was implemented in stroke care services, specifically inpatient rehabilitation, home rehabilitation, and home care.Reference Mathisen, Eilertsen and Ormstad15 Implementation outcomewise, Norwegian providers in each setting found the tool important, acceptable, and were motivated to use it in their practice; it was found more appropriate for implementation in rehabilitation settings focused on assessing visual function.Reference Mathisen, Eilertsen and Ormstad15 While the UK National Health Service and Norwegian care system are public health systems like that in Alberta, there are nuances in service availability (including availability of orthoptists) that influence the feasibility of implementing a similar model for poststroke VI care in Alberta.
Study limitations including a reliance on convenience sampling due to feasibility considerations during a global pandemic. Thus, results are not generalizable and do not represent all stroke survivors. This sampling limited the number and nature of statistical analyses conducted. There is likely a responder bias due to use of the consent-to-contact strategy, with those saying yes varying from other patient experiences. The data provide clear signals on common concerns and extant gaps in the care provided for poststroke VI.
Study findings highlight the need for an accessible stroke care pathway for patients with VI in Alberta. Adequate education resources, better inter-disciplinary communication, and a clear care pathway were identified as unmet needs, by stroke survivors and their providers. Efforts are underway to address these needs to improve the care of stroke survivors living with VI in Alberta. Future research is required to determine the acceptability, feasibility, and effectiveness of such multidisciplinary pathways when mapped across the care continuum.
Acknowledgements
The authors acknowledge the study co-investigators: Naeem Dean, Christopher Hanson, Robert Hirsche, Imran Jivraj, Tedra Kindopp, Micah Luong, Colleen Schreiber, Mahadeo Sukhai, Karim Valji, Natalie Ardiel, Andrew Demchuk, William Fletcher, Mary-Lou Halabi, Michael Hill, Carmen Lazorek, Agnes Lehman, Karen Lungard, Josie McGee, and Suresh Subramaniam. Many of these members helped conceive the idea of this project through their roles in the Vision Research Group of the Neurosciences, Rehabilitation & Vision (NRV) Strategic Clinical NetworkTM (SCN) at Alberta Health Services. The authors are extremely grateful to the leaders, managers, and clinicians at the 12 participating sites from across Alberta who championed this work during the global pandemic.
Funding
This study was funded through an 2020 Neurosciences Rehabilitation & Vision (NRV) Strategic Clinical NetworkTM (SCN) Seed Grant; research funding from the Cardiovascular Health & Stroke SCN; in-kind contributions from the Canadian National Institutes of the Blind; and funding from the Eye Institute of Alberta.
Conflicts of Interest
The authors declare that they have no competing interests.
Statement of Authorship
KPM drafted the manuscript, was involved in co-designing the work, supervised all data collection, completed all data analyses, and completed all manuscript revisions. KD and FC were involved in co-designing the work, supervised data collection, and contributed substantially to each draft of the manuscript. KB and JJ were involved in data collection and contributed substantial edits to the manuscript draft. PF was involved in data analyses and contributed substantial edits to the manuscript draft. All co-authors approved the submitted version and agreed to be personally accountable for their own contributions and to ensure questions on the work are appropriately investigated and resolved.
Ethics Approval and Consent to Participate
This study was approved by the Conjoint Health Research Ethics Board of the University of Calgary and the Health Research Ethics Board of the University of Alberta. A written informed consent was obtained from all subjects and/or their legal guardians.
Consent for Publications
All study participants provided written, informed consent to sharing de-identified, aggregated survey results, and as such only that level of data was presented in this report. A written informed consent was obtained from all subjects and/or their legal guardians.
Availability of Data and Materials
The datasets used during the current study are available in de-identified form from the corresponding author on reasonable request, but are not available publicly due to organizational privacy requirements.