BRAINSTREAMS 5 News 5 Stroke patients’ health outcomes influenced by spouse’s optimism ( Page 73 )

Feb 22, 2013

Stroke patients’ health outcomes influenced by spouse’s optimism

by

TORONTO – Spouses and family members looking after a loved one who just suffered a stroke have a reason to try to stay optimistic during the trying times: new American research suggests stroke patients’ health outcomes are influenced by their caregiver’s outlook.

Following a stroke, life changes dramatically for a family. Stroke is a leading cause of disability in North America. Half of stroke victims experience paralysis on one side of their bodies, 30 per cent can’t walk and another 19 per cent have speech problems.

It’s an incredibly challenging time for the stroke victim and their families left to pick up the pieces of their previous life.

That’s why University of Kentucky scientists say that stroke survivors and their spouse caregivers need to be treated together, “as a unit, not individually.”

Read more>>

Related Posts

Brain Injury Patient Urges Kids to Wear Helmets

In this bitter cold, you want to make sure your children are well protected if they're going skating or tobogganing. But you may want to consider another layer of protection: helmets. Last year, the Children’s Hospital of Eastern Ontario saw 1,270 children with head...

read more

Rewiring Trevor Greene’s brain

The former soldier survived an axe attack in Afghanistan, now he’s defying the limits of science in his recovery. It has been 25 years since Trevor Greene gave up competitive rowing for other pursuits: journalism, travel, soldiering, fatherhood, marriage. But today,...

read more
Translate »