Family resilience of stroke survivors within 6 months after a first-episode stroke: A longitudinal study

Front Psychiatry. 2022 Oct 13:13:968933. doi: 10.3389/fpsyt.2022.968933. eCollection 2022.

Abstract

Context: Family resilience is frequently recognized as a powerful determinant of family adaptation in chronic disease patients; understanding the family resilience of stroke patients and its predictors could help nurses develop interventions to assist patients in maintaining healthy family functioning.

Objective: This study aimed to explore the trajectory of family resilience in the 6 months following stroke onset and examine the predictors of family resilience over time.

Methods: A total of 288 first-episode stroke survivors were selected from seven hospitals in China from July 2020 to March 2021. Their family resilience, social support, self-efficacy, and medical coping style were assessed at hospitalization and 1, 3, and 6 months after stroke onset. The study was performed in accordance with the STROBE guidelines.

Results: The mean levels of family resilience were between 95.52 ± 11.10 and 97.68 ± 9.68 within the first 6 months after a first-episode stroke, with a significant increase 3 months after the onset. Patient self-efficacy, social support, family atmosphere, and caregiver-patient relationship (sibling) were predictors of family resilience at all four time points. Baseline predictors of family resilience at 6 months included self-efficacy of the patients, subjective support, support utilization, family atmosphere, living district, medical bill payment methods, and caregiver-patient relationship (sibling).

Conclusion: Family resilience levels were low in stroke patients 6 months after the onset, and 3 months post-stroke onset was a critical period for family resilience of stroke patients. Nurses are recommended to pay particular attention to patients with low self-efficacy, perceived low support, poor utilization of available support, as well as those who are under the care of their siblings, self-pay, or live in a poor family atmosphere. Interventions aimed at improving the self-efficacy of patients and social support are potential approaches to enhance family resilience.

Keywords: chronic disease; coping style; family resilience; longitudinal study; self-efficacy; social support; stroke.