The primary goal of this study is to determine if adding self-administered, daily hand therapy to standard of care improves post-stroke clinical outcomes. The investigators will investigate two distinct approaches to implement self-administered therapy and observe how the participants fare to the standard outpatient visits-a total of 3 experimental groups. The first approach consists of daily exercise routines; the second approach consists of using a novel, portable, electronic device that was intentionally designed to address the difficult problem of hand rehabilitation. Specifically, the device combines hand therapy with video game-like tasks. Both post-stroke approaches will be partially supervised by an occupational therapist via short telemedicine sessions, in the context of standard-of-care telemedicine clinic (JSTTEP - described below) to promote safety and proper form during the exercises or device utilization.
The primary outcome is a standardized, post-intervention functional hand metric. This pilot study will include both measurement of improvements with respect to a baseline, and comparison between groups, using the therapist-provided therapy sessions as control and gold standard.
The investigators will recruit 60 adult stroke survivors. The total will be divided into three matched groups. Two of the groups (G1 and G2, 20 participants each) will receive therapy-based interventions in addition to the standard of care, and the remaining control group (CG, 20 participants) will receive the standard of care and no additional therapy.
Current standard of care regarding stroke inpatients requires admission to Johns Hopkins Comprehensive Stroke Center. At discharge, depending upon the stroke severity, patients can either be discharged to a facility or to home. This study is specifically targeting patients discharged to home.
Importantly, patients going home are followed in the Joint Stroke Transitional Technology-Enhanced Program (JSTTEP). JSTTEP is the standard of care, inter-disciplinary, telemedicine program that operates during the first month after stroke to facilitate the patient's transition from hospital to home. Each shared visit includes a physician and therapist evaluation and combined treatment plan. A single multidisciplinary online group education session is completed within 1 month after stoke hospitalization and is open to patients and care partners.
Stroke patients who are being discharged home from the Johns Hopkins Comprehensive Stroke Center via JSTTEP are eligible for participation in this study. A consecutive series of patients who meet inclusion criteria will be approached for consent to participate in this study. Inclusion (or exclusion) will be determined using the criteria described in the Inclusion/Exclusion Criteria Section, using a HIPAA Privacy Authorization Form. Upon consenting to participate in the study, each participant will undergo a Baseline Assessment visit, while still an inpatient, composed of a gaming, functional, and cognitive assessments (described below under Baseline Assessment). These assessments also work as screenings; that is, if, after signing the consent and during the enrollment process, a patient fails to meet enrollment criteria, the investigators can halt enrollment. Similarly, if a patient does meet the enrollment criteria, the participants will be assigned into a treatment group (as described below in the Randomization Section), and will receive instructions according to the participants group