Litcius/Paper detail

Motivation as a Measurable Outcome in Stroke Rehabilitation: A Systematic Review of the Literature

Giulio Verrienti, Cecilia Raccagni, Ginevra Lombardozzi, Daniela De Bartolo, Marco Iosa

2023International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health62 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Motivated behaviours are thought to lead to enhanced performances. In the neurorehabilitation field, motivation has been demonstrated to be a link between cognition and motor performance, therefore playing an important role upon rehabilitation outcome determining factors. While motivation-enhancing interventions have been frequently investigated, a common and reliable motivation assessment strategy has not been established yet. This review aims to systematically explore and provide a comparison among the existing motivation assessment tools concerning stroke rehabilitation. For this purpose, a literature search (PubMed and Google Scholar) was performed, using the following Medical Subject Headings terms: "assessment" OR "scale" AND "motivation" AND "stroke" AND "rehabilitation". In all, 31 randomized clinical trials and 15 clinical trials were examined. The existing assessment tools can be grouped into two categories: the first mirroring the trade-off between patients and rehabilitation, the latter reflecting the link between patients and interventions. Furthermore, we presented assessment tools which reflect participation level or apathy, as an indirect index of motivation. In conclusion, we are left to put forth a possible common motivation assessment strategy, which might provide valuable incentive to investigate in future research.

Topics & Concepts

NeurorehabilitationRehabilitationApathyPsychologyPsychological interventionMirroringPhysical medicine and rehabilitationIncentiveOutcome (game theory)Applied psychologySystematic reviewMEDLINECognitionClinical psychologyMedicinePsychiatrySocial psychologyMathematical economicsNeuroscienceMicroeconomicsLawMathematicsEconomicsPolitical scienceStroke Rehabilitation and RecoveryMotivation and Self-Concept in SportsSpatial Neglect and Hemispheric Dysfunction