Authors
Hiroto Takenaka, Hirotaka Iijima, Ryota Ashizawa, Keisuke Yamamori
Published in
Clinical rehabilitation. Pages 2692155261465887. Jul 11, 2026. Epub Jul 11, 2026.
Abstract
ObjectiveTo identify and map the intervention models, outcome domains and evidence gaps of telerehabilitation studies initiated during the hospital-to-home transition after a stroke.DesignA scoping review following the Arksey and O'Malley framework, reported according to the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses extension for Scoping Reviews.Data sourcesPubMed, Web of Science and Physiotherapy Evidence Database were searched from 2000 onward (original search: April 2025). An updated supplementary search using broader terms was conducted in the same three databases in May 2026, applying the same start date and the same eligibility criteria.Review methodsTwo independent reviewers screened the titles, abstracts and full texts. Data on the study design, participants, intervention characteristics, comparators and outcomes were extracted and descriptively synthesised. The studies were grouped by intervention model.ResultsEighteen studies were included and classified into four models: caregiver-mediated exercise, technology-driven motor telerehabilitation, multidisciplinary transitional care and low-technology or mobile health-supported. Technology-driven models showed motor outcomes comparable to conventional rehabilitation but inconsistent between-group superiority. Caregiver-mediated models did not improve primary mobility outcomes but suggested benefits for caregivers and psychosocial outcomes. Multidisciplinary models frequently improved quality of life, self-management and broader outcomes. Participation-level outcomes remained under-represented in the literature.ConclusionTelerehabilitation during the hospital-to-home transition is feasible and has been delivered through diverse models. Future research should evaluate participation, community reintegration, caregiver outcomes and implementation fidelity.
PMID:
42434911
Bibliographic data and abstract were imported from PubMed on 12 Jul 2026.
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