1st Edition

After Stroke Enhancing Quality of Life

By Wallace Sife Copyright 1998
    292 Pages
    by Routledge

    292 Pages
    by Routledge

    After Stroke: Enhancing Quality of Life brings together an extraordinary selection of advice, practical survivor techniques, information about resources, and personal stories of triumph. It is designed to help those who have experienced a stroke attain the highest quality of life possible, under their new physical restrictions.

    Recuperating from a stroke is an arduous process that has only just begun when the survivor is released from the hospital. This book shows anyone interested how to create an effective climate for healing and how to help the survivor realize his/her fullest recovery potential. It offers varied perspectives of everyone involved with a stroke: the patient, the family, and friends as well as the team of specialized physicians, nurses, psychologists, physical therapists, speech pathologists, and diverse therapists.

    Through its interesting and varied essays, After Stroke: Enhancing the Quality of Life offers the reader a clearer understanding of the injuries that the body as well as the mind have sustained. This anthology is carefully designed to present enhanced perspectives into all aspects of the healing and recovery processes that follow the personal tragedy of a stroke.

    Contents
    Introduction
    • Part I: Clinical Perspectives
    • Pathophysiology of Stroke
    • The Psychiatry of Stroke
    • Focused Stroke Rehabilitation Programs: A Review of Prospective Controlled Trials
    • Psychological Studies in Stroke Rehabilitation
    • Stroke as Chronic Illness: Living to the Fullest
    • How Common Is Depression Following Stroke?
    • Stroke and Quality of Life: Intimacy and Sexuality Poststroke
    • Part II: Professional Contributions
    • Nursing Care of the Stroke Patient: The Essence of Healing
    • Rehabilitation Nursing on a Stroke Unit
    • Aphasia: Rehabilitation and Recovery from Loss
    • Dysphagia: Swallowing Disorders Following a Stroke
    • Management of the Communicatively Challenged Adult After Stroke: Partners in Rehabilitation
    • The Speech/Language Pathologist: Bridging the Communication Gap
    • The Role of Physical Therapy in Multidisciplinary Stroke Rehabilitation
    • Occupational Therapy Intervention in the Rehabilitation of Stroke Patients
    • Therapeutic Recreation and the Rehabilitation of the Stroke Patient
    • The Nature of Suffering and the Goals of Medicine
    • The Role of the Social Worker on a Stroke Rehabilitation Unit
    • Part III: Personal Reflections
    • Stroke! This Isn't the Script I Was Writing!
    • AHA! There Is a Reason
    • The Words I Lost
    • Aphasia, as Seen by an Aphasic
    • The Language Loss of Patricia Neal and Helen Wulf
    • Self-Portrait of an Aphasic (From a Personal and Professional Viewpoint)
    • The Plight of the One-Armed Paperhanger
    • The Perils of Travel, Following a Stroke
    • Planning a Trip When the Traveler Has a Disability
    • Part IV: Healing Dimensions
    • The Interests and Activities of AARP in Quality of Life Issues and Stroke Patients and Their Families
    • New Concept in Stroke Rehabilitation
    • Conquering Community Barriers: Stroke Rehabilitation
    • Surviving a Stroke: The Miracles of Science and Spirit
    • Self-Empowerment in Healing
    • Index
    • Reference Notes Included

    Biography

    Wallace Sift