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A pilot economic evaluation of a feasibility trial for SUpporting wellbeing through PEeR-Befriending (SUPERB) for post-stroke aphasia
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'Now I am myself’: exploring how people with post-stroke aphasia experienced Solution Focused Brief Therapy within the SOFIA Trial
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‘Emotion is of the essence. … Number one priority’: A nested qualitative study exploring psychosocial adjustment to stroke and aphasia
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"Loneliness can also kill:" a qualitative exploration of outcomes and experiences of the SUPERB peer-befriending scheme for people with aphasia and their significant others
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"For them and for me": a qualitative exploration of peer befrienders' experiences supporting people with aphasia in the SUPERB feasibility trial
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SUpporting wellbeing through PEeR-Befriending (SUPERB) feasibility trial: fidelity of peer-befriending for people with aphasia
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Supporting wellbeing through peer-befriending (SUPERB) for people with aphasia: A feasibility randomised controlled trial
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Behn, N.; McVicker, S.; Simpson, A.; Goldsmith, K.; Northcott, S.; Moss, B.; Marshall, J.; James, K.; Flood, C.; Hilari, K.; Thomas, S.. - : SAGE Publications, 2021
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Abstract:
OBJECTIVE: To determine the feasibility and acceptability of peer-befriending, for people with aphasia. DESIGN: Single-blind, parallel-group feasibility randomised controlled trial comparing usual care to usual care + peer-befriending. PARTICIPANTS AND SETTING: People with aphasia post-stroke and low levels of distress, recruited from 5 NHS Hospitals and linked community services; their significant others; and 10 befrienders recruited from community. INTERVENTION: Six 1-hour peer-befriending visits over three months. MAIN MEASURES: Feasibility parameters included proportion eligible of those screened; proportion consented; missing data; consent and attrition rates. Acceptability was explored through qualitative interviews. Outcomes for participants and significant others were measured at baseline, 4- and 10-months; for peer-befrienders before training and after one/two cycles of befriending. RESULTS: Of 738 patients identified, 75 were eligible of 89 fully screened (84%), 62 consented (83% of eligible) and 56 randomised. Attrition was 16%. Adherence was high (93% attended ⩾2 sessions, 81% all six). The difference at 10 months on the GHQ-12 was 1.23 points on average lower/better in the intervention arm (95% CI 0.17, -2.63). There was an 88% decrease in the odds of GHQ-12 caseness (95% CI 0.01, 1.01). Fourty-eight significant others and 10 peer-befrienders took part. Procedures and outcome measures were acceptable. Serious adverse events were few (n = 10, none for significant others and peer-befrienders) and unrelated. CONCLUSIONS: SUPERB peer-befriending for people with aphasia post-stroke experiencing low levels of distress was feasible. There was preliminary evidence of benefit in terms of depression. Peer-befriending is a suitable intervention to explore further in a definitive trial.Clinical trial registration-URL: http://www.clinicaltrials.gov Unique identifier: NCT02947776Subject terms: Translational research, mental health, rehabilitation, quality and outcomes, stroke.
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Keyword:
HM Sociology; HN Social history and conditions. Social problems. Social reform; P Philology. Linguistics; RT Nursing
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URL: https://openaccess.city.ac.uk/id/eprint/25770/ https://openaccess.city.ac.uk/id/eprint/25770/5/0269215521995671.pdf https://openaccess.city.ac.uk/id/eprint/25770/6/sj-pdf-1-cre-10.1177_0269215521995671.pdf https://doi.org/10.1177/0269215521995671
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Solution Focused brief therapy In post-stroke Aphasia (SOFIA): feasibility and acceptability results of a feasibility randomised wait-list controlled trial
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“Loneliness can also kill:” a qualitative exploration of outcomes and experiences of the SUPERB peer-befriending scheme for people with aphasia and their significant others ...
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“Loneliness can also kill:” a qualitative exploration of outcomes and experiences of the SUPERB peer-befriending scheme for people with aphasia and their significant others ...
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“For them and for me”: a qualitative exploration of peer befrienders’ experiences supporting people with aphasia in the SUPERB feasibility trial
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Adjustment with aphasia after stroke: a pilot feasibility randomised controlled trial for supporting wellbeing through peer-befriending (SUPERB)
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Adjustment Post-Stroke and Aphasia: Protocol for the SUpporting Well-Being Through PEeR-Befriending (SUPERB Trial)
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SUpporting Wellbeing Through PEeR-Befriending (SUPERB) Trial: An Exploration of Fidelity in Peer-Befriending for People with Aphasia
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SOlution Focused brief therapy In post-stroke Aphasia (SOFIA Trial): protocol for a feasibility randomised controlled trial
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SUpporting Wellbeing Through PEeR-Befriending (SUPERB) Trial: An Exploration of Fidelity in Peer-Befriending for People with Aphasia
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SUpporting well-being through PEeR-Befriending (SUPERB) trial: an exploration of fidelity in peer-befriending for people with aphasia
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How acceptable is solution focused brief therapy (SFBT) to people with severe aphasia?
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Supporting people with aphasia to ‘settle into a new way to be’: speech and language therapists’ views on providing psychosocial support
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Blinding participants and assessors in a feasibility randomised controlled trial of peer-befriending for people with aphasia post-stroke
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