All Stories

  1. Is rehabilitation's unifying expertise its holistic scope and cognitive approach to the patient's problems? An exploration
  2. Health economic studies in clinical rehabilitation: A new collection of papers and a discussion of issues involved in research
  3. Do some people with a prolonged disorder of consciousness experience pain? A clinically focused narrative review and synthesis
  4. Prolonged disorder of consciousness: giving a second opinion on the best interests of a person
  5. Does a service provide safe, effective rehabilitation? An evaluation method for providers and purchasers
  6. Knee osteoarthritis pendulum therapy: In vivo evaluation and a randomised, single-blind feasibility clinical trial
  7. A pilot, feasibility randomised, controlled trial comparing walking exercise against pendulum leg swinging exercise in adults with osteoarthritis of the knee. (Preprint)
  8. A general theory of rehabilitation: Rehabilitation catalyses and assists adaptation to illness
  9. Artificial Intelligence algorithms cannot recommend a best interests decision but could help by improving prognostication
  10. Rehabilitation potential: A critical review of its meaning and validity
  11. Moving on. A farewell from the last Editor-in-Chief who says: ‘Rehabilitation is a way of thinking, not a way of doing’
  12. Prolonged disorders of consciousness: A response to a “critical evaluation of the new UK guidelines.”
  13. A pilot, feasibility randomised, controlled trial comparing walking exercise against pendulum leg swinging exercise in adults with osteoarthritis of the knee.
  14. Self-managed occupational therapy and physiotherapy for adults receiving inpatient rehabilitation (‘My Therapy’): protocol for a stepped-wedge cluster randomised trial
  15. Defining rehabilitation: An exploration of why it is attempted, and why it will always fail
  16. Dual-task walking and automaticity after Stroke: Insights from a secondary analysis and imaging sub-study of a randomised controlled trial
  17. The future of rehabilitation in the United Kingdom National Health Service: Using the COVID-19 crisis to promote change, increasing efficiency and effectiveness
  18. Immunotherapy to reduce frequency of urinary tract infections in people with neurogenic bladder dysfunction; a pilot randomised, placebo-controlled trial
  19. What attributes should a specialist in rehabilitation have? Seven suggested specialist Capabilities in Practice
  20. What is rehabilitation? An empirical investigation leading to an evidence-based description
  21. Making healthcare decisions in a person’s best interests when they lack capacity: clinical guidance based on a review of evidence
  22. Determining whether someone has mental capacity to make a decision: clinical guidance based on a review of the evidence
  23. Uro-Vaxom® versus placebo for the prevention of recurrent symptomatic urinary tract infections in participants with chronic neurogenic bladder dysfunction: a randomised controlled feasibility study
  24. A randomised double-blind placebo-controlled feasibility trial of flavonoid-rich cocoa for fatigue in people with relapsing and remitting multiple sclerosis
  25. Correction to: Variation in neurosurgical management of traumatic brain injury: a survey in 68 centers participating in the CENTER-TBI study
  26. A randomized controlled trial of a walking training with simultaneous cognitive demand (dual-task) in chronic stroke
  27. Malingering and factitious disorder
  28. Commentary on Charles Foster’s ‘The rebirth of medical paternalism: an NHS Trust v Y’
  29. Using eye masks and earplugs to improve inpatients' sleep
  30. Clinically assisted nutrition and hydration
  31. What I learned from my illness. Listen to what a patient tells you about changes in their experience and function, not about their current state
  32. How many patients in a prolonged disorder of consciousness might need a best interests meeting about starting or continuing gastrostomy feeding?
  33. Does feedback on daily activity level from a Smart watch during inpatient stroke rehabilitation increase physical activity levels? Study protocol for a randomized controlled trial
  34. How often is the diagnosis of the permanent vegetative state incorrect? A review of the evidence
  35. A protocol for a randomised double-blind placebo-controlled feasibility study to determine whether the daily consumption of flavonoid-rich pure cocoa has the potential to reduce fatigue in people with relapsing and remitting multiple sclerosis (RRMS)
  36. Using best interests meetings for people in a prolonged disorder of consciousness to improve clinical and ethical management
  37. Variation in monitoring and treatment policies for intracranial hypertension in traumatic brain injury: a survey in 66 neurotrauma centers participating in the CENTER-TBI study
  38. The biopsychosocial model of illness: a model whose time has come
  39. One-year functional outcomes following major trauma: experience of a UK level 1 major trauma centre
  40. A long-term self-managed handwriting intervention for people with Parkinson’s disease: results from the control group of a phase II randomized controlled trial
  41. Long-term Outcome After Survival of a Cardiac Arrest
  42. Dealing with a life changing event: The influence of spirituality and coping style on quality of life after survival of a cardiac arrest or myocardial infarction
  43. Phase II randomised controlled trial of a 6-month self-managed community exercise programme for people with Parkinson's disease
  44. Variation in Structure and Process of Care in Traumatic Brain Injury: Provider Profiles of European Neurotrauma Centers Participating in the CENTER-TBI Study
  45. Back to the bedside? Making clinical decisions in patients with prolonged unconsciousness
  46. Having an impact, making a difference: the Editor’s review of the first 30 years
  47. Thirtieth Anniversary Issue of Clinical Rehabilitation: an introductory editorial
  48. Rehabilitation – a new approach. Part four: a new paradigm, and its implications
  49. Multi-disciplinary rehabilitation for acquired brain injury in adults of working age
  50. Rehabilitation – a new approach. Part three: the implications of the theories
  51. Rehabilitation – a new approach. Part two: the underlying theories
  52. Registration of all rehabilitation clinical trials: an ethical and editorial imperative
  53. Rehabilitation – a new approach. Overview and Part One: the problems
  54. Restricting freedom of people with limited awareness of maintaining their well-being: a legal quagmire
  55. Early neurologically-focused follow-up after cardiac arrest improves quality of life at one year: A randomised controlled trial
  56. Utility of the MOCA as a cognitive predictor for fitness to drive
  57. Rehabilitation interventions for foot drop in neuromuscular disease
  58. Influence of Self-Efficacy and Coping on Quality of Life and Social Participation After Acquired Brain Injury: A 1-Year Follow-Up Study
  59. Interventions for fatigue in Parkinson's disease: A systematic review and meta-analysis
  60. Life goal attainment in the adaptation process after acquired brain injury: the influence of self-efficacy and of flexibility and tenacity in goal pursuit
  61. Psychometric properties of the Coping Inventory for Stressful Situations (CISS) in patients with acquired brain injury.
  62. Conscientious care for the unconscious patient: new guidance from the Royal College of Physicians
  63. National Institute for Health and Care Excellence stroke rehabilitation guidance – is it useful, usable, and based on best evidence?
  64. ‘Stand still …, and move on’ , an early neurologically-focused follow-up for cardiac arrest survivors and their caregivers: a process evaluation
  65. Patients with prolonged disorders of consciousness: more than a clinical challenge
  66. How flexible is coping after acquired brain injury? A 1-year prospective study investigating coping patterns and influence of self-efficacy, executive functioning and self-awareness
  67. Measuring complexity in neurological rehabilitation: the Oxford Case Complexity Assessment Measure (OCCAM)
  68. Study Protocol of the Restore4Stroke Self-Management Study: A Multicenter Randomized Controlled Trial in Stroke Patients and Their Partners
  69. Delayed Recovery of Leg Fatigue Symptoms Following a Maximal Exercise Session in People With Multiple Sclerosis
  70. Non pharmacological interventions for spasticity in multiple sclerosis
  71. The effects of mental practice in neurological rehabilitation; a systematic review and meta-analysis
  72. fMRI for vegetative and minimally conscious states
  73. Evidence-based cognitive rehabilitation after acquired brain injury: A systematic review of content of treatment
  74. Practical research-based guidance for motor imagery practice in neurorehabilitation
  75. Evaluation of the safety and tolerability profile of Sativex®: is it reassuring enough?
  76. The adaptation process following acute onset disability: an interactive two-dimensional approach applied to acquired brain injury
  77. Functional abilities after stroke: measurement, natural history and prognosis
  78. A Multicenter Randomized Controlled Trial to Compare Subacute ‘Treatment as Usual’ With and Without Mental Practice Among Persons With Stroke in Dutch Nursing Homes
  79. Disease-specific training in Parkinson’s disease for care assistants: a comparison of interactive and self-study methods
  80. Treatment of mental slowness: How to evaluate treatment effects. A systematic review of outcome measures
  81. A comparison of specialist rehabilitation and care assistant support with specialist rehabilitation alone and usual care for people with Parkinson's living in the community: study protocol for a randomised controlled trial
  82. Weekly exercise does not improve fatigue levels in Parkinson's disease
  83. Use of movement imagery in neurorehabilitation
  84. Introductory paragraph
  85. ‘Stand still … , and move on’, a new early intervention service for cardiac arrest survivors and their caregivers: rationale and description of the intervention
  86. Complexity, case-mix and rehabilitation: the importance of a holistic model of illness
  87. Supporting community-based exercise in long-term neurological conditions: experience from the Long-term Individual Fitness Enablement (LIFE) project
  88. Supported community exercise in people with long-term neurological conditions: a phase II randomized controlled trial
  89. The clinical aspects of mirror therapy in rehabilitation
  90. Motor imagery in patients with a right hemisphere stroke and unilateral neglect
  91. The Mississippi categorisation of post-traumatic amnesia is better than the Russell classification
  92. Exercise for multiple sclerosis: a single-blind randomized trial comparing three exercise intensities
  93. Agreement between Two Different Scoring Procedures for Goal Attainment Scaling is Low
  94. Hydration and independence in activities of daily living in people with multiple sclerosis: a pilot investigation
  95. Rehabilitation with mental practice has similar effects on mobility as rehabilitation with relaxation in people with Parkinson's disease: a multicentre randomised trial
  96. Workloads of Parkinson’s specialist nurses: implications for implementing national service guidelines in England
  97. Correction
  98. Social participation through the eyes of people with aphasia
  99. Feasibility of a mental practice intervention in stroke patients in nursing homes; a process evaluation
  100. Research in rehabilitation medicine: Methodological challenges
  101. Meta-analysis of the efficacy and safety of Sativex (nabiximols), on spasticity in people with multiple sclerosis
  102. An Integrated Motor Imagery Program to Improve Functional Task Performance in Neurorehabilitation: A Single-Blind Randomized Controlled Trial
  103. Erratum
  104. Psychometric Properties of the Community Integration Questionnaire Adjusted for People With Aphasia
  105. Measuring case complexity in neurological rehabilitation
  106. An investigation into the social participation of stroke survivors with aphasia
  107. Efficacy of Time Pressure Management in Stroke Patients With Slowed Information Processing: A Randomized Controlled Trial
  108. Editorial
  109. Fast walking under cognitive-motor interference conditions in chronic stroke
  110. Gait adaptations to simultaneous cognitive and mechanical constraints
  111. Control in rehabilitation research
  112. Rehabilitation interventions for foot drop in neuromuscular disease
  113. Facilitating the participation of people with aphasia in research: a description of strategies
  114. Brain Activity Changes Associated With Treadmill Training After Stroke
  115. Life after survival: Long-term daily functioning and quality of life after an out-of-hospital cardiac arrest
  116. Adverse effects of rehabilitation – an opportunity to increase quality and effectiveness of rehabilitation
  117. Goal setting in rehabilitation: an overview of what, why and how
  118. Cognitive impairments in survivors of out-of-hospital cardiac arrest: A systematic review
  119. Writing SMART rehabilitation goals and achieving goal attainment scaling: a practical guide
  120. Pedometer step counts in individuals with neurological conditions
  121. Mental techniques during manual stretching in spasticity — a pilot randomized controlled trial
  122. A study of perceived facilitators to physical activity in neurological conditions
  123. Reliability and validity of two new instruments for measuring aspects of mental slowness in the daily lives of stroke patients
  124. Training patients in Time Pressure Management, a cognitive strategy for mental slowness
  125. A description of social participation in working‐age persons with aphasia: A review of the literature
  126. The Effects of Stretching in Spasticity: A Systematic Review
  127. Using mental practice in stroke rehabilitation: a framework
  128. Measures for rating social participation in people with aphasia: a systematic review
  129. Functional MRI Correlates of Lower Limb Function in Stroke Victims With Gait Impairment
  130. Walking performance and its recovery in chronic stroke in relation to extent of lesion overlap with the descending motor tract
  131. Editorial
  132. Effects of mental practice embedded in daily therapy compared to therapy as usual in adult stroke patients in Dutch nursing homes: design of a randomised controlled trial
  133. Is it possible to use the Structural Dimension Analysis of Motor Memory (SDA-M) to investigate representations of motor actions in stroke patients?
  134. Activity and Life After Survival of a Cardiac Arrest (ALASCA) and the effectiveness of an early intervention service: design of a randomised controlled trial
  135. Ethics of collecting and using healthcare data
  136. Life after survival: long-term daily life functioning and quality of life of patients with hypoxic brain injury as a result of a cardiac arrest
  137. Rehabilitation interventions for foot drop in neuromuscular disease
  138. Social roles and long-term illness: is it time to rehabilitate convalescence?
  139. Can aerobic treadmill training reduce the effort of walking and fatigue in people with multiple sclerosis: a pilot study
  140. Somatosensory recovery: A longitudinal study of the first 6 months after unilateral stroke
  141. Rehabilitation Omniana
  142. The Rivermead Post Concussion Symptoms Questionnaire
  143. Long-term use of a cannabis-based medicine in the treatment of spasticity and other symptoms in multiple sclerosis
  144. Cluster Randomized Pilot Controlled Trial of an Occupational Therapy Intervention for Residents With Stroke in UK Care Homes
  145. Manifestations of mental slowness in the daily life of patients with stroke: a qualitative study
  146. The Effects of Mental Practice in Stroke Rehabilitation: A Systematic Review
  147. A pilot randomised controlled trial of a home-based exercise programme aimed at improving endurance and function in adults with neuromuscular disorders
  148. Disruption of sitting balance after stroke: influence of spoken output
  149. Treadmill training for individuals with multiple sclerosis: a pilot randomised trial
  150. Evaluating rehabilitation using cost-consequences analysis: an example in Parkinson's disease
  151. Why physical medicine, physical disability and physical rehabilitation? We should abandon Cartesian dualism
  152. A case of post-traumatic isolated ACTH deficiency with spontaneous recovery 9 months after the event
  153. Psychiatric aspects of head injury management
  154. Editorial
  155. Exertional symptoms and exercise capacity in individuals with brain injury
  156. Editorial
  157. The association of physical deconditioning and chronic low back pain: A hypothesis-oriented systematic review
  158. The Effectiveness of Rehabilitation for Cognitive Deficits
  159. Family support for stroke: one year follow up of a randomised controlled trial
  160. ‘But is the difference clinically significant?’
  161. Borg’s Rating of Perceived Exertion Scales: Do the Verbal Anchors Mean the Same for Different Clinical Groups?
  162. Randomized clinical trials in Clinical Rehabilitation
  163. Investigating the effectiveness of rehabilitation professions - a misguided enterprise?
  164. Randomization in clinical research
  165. Does reducing spasticity translate into functional benefit? An exploratory meta-analysis
  166. Do cannabis-based medicinal extracts have general or specific effects on symptoms in multiple sclerosis? A double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled study on 160 patients
  167. Combined analysis of two randomized trials of community physiotherapy for patients more than one year post stroke
  168. SaGA S, the Short and Graphic A bility Score: an alternative scoring method for the motor components of the Multiple Sclerosis Functional C omposite
  169. Evaluation of the Modifid Jebsen Test of Hand Function and the University of Maryland Arm Questionnaire for Stroke
  170. Rehabilitation following acquired brain injury: concise guidance
  171. Changes in life goals of people with neurological disabilities
  172. Erratum
  173. Satisfaction of members of interdisciplinary rehabilitation teams with goal planning meetings11No commercial party having a direct financial interest in the results of the research supporting this article has or will confer a benefit on the author(s) o...
  174. Verbal fluency assessment of patients with multiple sclerosis: test–retest and inter-observer reliability
  175. Heart Rate as a Measure of Exercise Testing Early after Acquired Brain Injury
  176. Postoperative hypoxia is a contributory factor to cognitive impairment after cardiac surgery
  177. Should All Stroke Rehabilitation Be Home Based?
  178. Life goals of people with disabilities due to neurological disorders
  179. Relative contribution of footwear to the efficacy of ankle-foot orthoses
  180. The effect of a perceptual cognitive task on exercise performance: the dual-task condition after brain injury
  181. The effect of increasing effort on movement economy during incremental cycling exercise in individuals early after acquired brain injury
  182. New wine in old bottles: the WHO ICF as an explanatory model of human behaviour
  183. The Adult Memory and Information Processing Battery (AMIPB) test of information-processing speed: a study of its reliability and feasibility in patients with multiple sclerosis
  184. Selection criteria for rehabilitation services
  185. A preliminary controlled study to determine whether whole-plant cannabis extracts can improve intractable neurogenic symptoms
  186. Barriers to rehabilitation research, and overcoming them
  187. Multidisciplinary rehabilitation for people with Parkinson's disease: a randomised controlled study
  188. Community rehabilitation, or rehabilitation in the community?
  189. THE NORTHWICK PARK DEPENDENCY SCORE AND ITS RELATIONSHIP TO NURSING HOURS IN NEUROLOGICAL REHABILITATION
  190. Correlation between motor improvements and altered fMRI activity after rehabilitative therapy
  191. RIVCAM: a simple video-based kinematic analysis for clinical disorders of gait
  192. Short-term effectiveness of intensive multidisciplinary rehabilitation for people with Parkinson's disease and their carers
  193. A randomised placebo controlled exploratory study of vitamin B-12, lofepramine, and L-phenylalanine (the "Cari Loder regime") in the treatment of multiple sclerosis
  194. Characteristics of patients with persistent severe disability and medically unexplained neurological symptoms: a pilot study
  195. Rehabilitation is a way of thinking, not a way of doing
  196. The Rivermead Assessment of Somatosensory Performance (RASP): standardization and reliability data
  197. Editorial announcement
  198. Rehabilitation research–time for a change of focus
  199. The dis-integration of death
  200. Diagnosis in rehabilitation: woolly thinking and resource inequity
  201. Delayed discharges from Oxford city hospitals: who and why?
  202. Cognitive assessment and neurological rehabilitation
  203. The Guy's Neurological Disability Scale in patients with multiple sclerosis: a clinical evaluation of its reliability and validity
  204. Community rehabilitation
  205. Community rehabilitation in the United Kingdom
  206. Regional variations in stroke care in England, Wales and Northern Ireland: results from the National Sentinel Audit of Stroke
  207. Social context as a focus for rehabilitation
  208. Medically unexplained disability – a misnomer, and an opportunity for rehabilitation
  209. Prospective study of omental transposition in patients with chronic spinal injury
  210. Research into rehabilitation. What is the priority?
  211. AN INITIAL INVESTIGATION OF THE RELIABILITY OF THE RIVERMEAD EXTENDED ADL INDEX IN PATIENTS PRESENTING WITH NEUROLOGICAL IMPAIRMENT
  212. Research into the black box of rehabilitation: the risks of a Type III error
  213. Validity and reliability comparison of 4 mobility measures in patients presenting with neurologic impairment
  214. High-intensity cycling exercise after a stroke: a single case study
  215. The effect of magnesium oral therapy on spasticity in a patient with multiple sclerosis
  216. Pitch and Timing Abilities in Adult Left-Hemisphere-Dysphasic and Right-Hemisphere-Damaged Subjects
  217. Interference between gait and cognitive tasks in a rehabilitating neurological population
  218. Family support for stroke: a randomised controlled trial
  219. The London handicap scale
  220. Inter-rater reliability of the Frenchay Activities Index in patients with stroke and their carers
  221. Outcome Measures in Acute Stroke Trials
  222. Personal context as a focus for rehabilitation
  223. The London handicap scale: a re-evaluation of its validity using standard scoring and simple summation
  224. Clinical governance and rehabilitation services
  225. Randomized controlled trials – a gold standard?
  226. Is cardiopulmonary bypass still the cause of cognitive dysfunction after cardiac operations?
  227. Does parietal cortex contribute to feature binding?
  228. “Wheelchair” patients with nonorganic disease
  229. An Audit of Goal Planning in Rehabilitation
  230. Goal Planning in Stroke Rehabilitation: Evidence
  231. Goal Planning in Stroke Rehabilitation: How?
  232. Goal Planning in Stroke Rehabilitation: What?
  233. Goal Planning in Stroke Rehabilitation: Why?
  234. Rehabilitation therapy after stroke
  235. Editorial
  236. Outcome measurement and rehabilitation
  237. The Short Orientation–Memory–Concentration Test: a study of its reliability and validity
  238. Somatosensory Assessment after Central Nerve Damage: the Need for Standardized Clinical Measures
  239. Cognitive performance after cardiac operation: Implications of regression toward the mean
  240. Early prediction of persisting post-concussion symptoms following mild and moderate head injuries
  241. Current practice and clinical relevance of somatosensory assessment after stroke
  242. What is special about a specialist in rehabilitation?
  243. A comparison of two physiotherapy treatment approaches to improve walking in multiple sclerosis: a pilot randomized controlled study
  244. The impact of an information pack on patients with stroke and their carers: a randomized controlled trial
  245. The review process
  246. Evidence relating to goal planning in rehabilitation
  247. Routine follow up after head injury: a second randomised controlled trial
  248. Evidence relating to assessment in rehabilitation
  249. Editorial
  250. Proceedings of SRR
  251. Visual gait analysis: the development of a clinical assessment and scale
  252. Assault, post-traumatic amnesia and other variables related to outcome following head injury
  253. Editorial
  254. The left hemisphere and the selection of learned actions
  255. The Barthel Index and its relationship to nursing dependency in rehabilitation
  256. Editorial
  257. Services for patients with multiple sclerosis
  258. The left parietal cortex and motor attention
  259. The functional anatomy of a hysterical paralysis
  260. Comparison of postal version of the Frenchay Activities Index with interviewer-administered version for use in people with stroke
  261. Does routine follow up after head injury help? A randomised controlled trial.
  262. Editorial
  263. Somatosensory assessment: can seeing produce feeling?
  264. Editorial
  265. Interventions and service need following mild and moderate head injury: the Oxford Head Injury Service
  266. Measurement of post-traumatic amnesia: how reliable is it?
  267. Editorial
  268. Epidemiology of disabling neurological disease: how and why does disability occur?
  269. Editorial
  270. Editorial
  271. The Rivermead head injury follow up questionnaire: a study of a new rating scale and other measures to evaluate outcome after head injury.
  272. Admission after head injury: how many occur and how many are recorded?
  273. Face and voice expression identification in patients with emotional and behavioural changes following ventral frontal lobe damage
  274. Bedside screening for aphasia: a comparison of two methods
  275. Editorial
  276. When Seeing is Feeling: Acquired Synaesthesia or Phantom Touch?
  277. The Oxfordshire Head Injury Register
  278. Editorial
  279. A subjective memory assessment questionnaire for use with elderly people after stroke
  280. Editorial
  281. Sensory detection without localization
  282. Damage to cerebellocortical pathways after closed head injury: a behavioural and magnetic resonance imaging study.
  283. Reduplication of an Event After Head Injury? A Cautionary Case Report
  284. Unilateral Somatoparaphrenia After Right Hemisphere Stroke: A Case Description
  285. The Rivermead Post Concussion Symptoms Questionnaire: a measure of symptoms commonly experienced after head injury and its reliability
  286. Emotion-related learning in patients with social and emotional changes associated with frontal lobe damage.
  287. Enhanced physical therapy for arm function after stroke: a one year follow up study.
  288. Post-concussion symptoms: is stress a mediating factor?
  289. Long-term risk of recurrent stroke after a first-ever stroke. The Oxfordshire Community Stroke Project.
  290. Measurement in neurologic rehabilitation
  291. Long-term survival after first-ever stroke: the Oxfordshire Community Stroke Project.
  292. Thumb in cheek? Sensory reorganization and perceptual plasticity after limb amputation
  293. Three arms: a case study of supernumerary phantom limb after right hemisphere stroke.
  294. Diminution and enhancement of visuo-spatial neglect with sequential trials
  295. Disability after Stroke and Its Impact on Secondary Prevention
  296. Visuo-spatial neglect: qualitative differences and laterality of cerebral lesion.
  297. First steps towards an interdisciplinary approach to rehabilitation
  298. Left on the right: allochiria in a case of left visuo-spatial neglect.
  299. Enhanced physical therapy improves recovery of arm function after stroke. A randomised controlled trial.
  300. Contrapositioning in a case of visual neglect
  301. Stroke: rehabilitation and long-term care
  302. Functional outcome of lower limb amputees with peripheral vascular disease
  303. Policies on the management of patients with head injury: the experience of Oxford Region
  304. Residual mobility problems after stroke
  305. The Rivermead Mobility Index: A further development of the Rivermead Motor Assessment
  306. Assessing motor impairment after stroke: a pilot reliability study.
  307. Do visual field deficits exacerbate visuo-spatial neglect?
  308. Designing district disability services -the Oxford experience
  309. Persistent metabolic sequelae of severe head injury in humansin vivo
  310. Influence of cognitive function on social, domestic, and leisure activities of community-dwelling older people
  311. Mobility after stroke: Reliability of measures of impairment and disability
  312. VISUOSPATIAL NEGLECT: UNDERLYING FACTORS AND TEST SENSITIVITY
  313. Organization of stroke care services
  314. The development of a disease classification system, based on the International Classification of Diseases, for use by neurologists.
  315. Measuring arm impairment and disability after stroke
  316. Selected cognitive losses after stroke: Frequency, recovery and prognostic importance
  317. A prospective study of acute cerebrovascular disease in the community: the Oxfordshire Community Stroke Project 1981-86. 1. Methodology, demography and incident cases of first-ever stroke.
  318. Priorities for Research in the Rehabilitation of Severe Head Injury in Children
  319. MEASUREMENT IN REHABILITATION
  320. Recovery of cognitive function soon after stroke: a study of visual neglect, attention span and verbal recall.
  321. The Barthel ADL Index: A reliability study
  322. The Barthel ADL Index: A standard measure of physical disability?
  323. Selection of aphasic stroke patients for intensive speech therapy.
  324. Dysphagia in acute stroke.
  325. Motor loss and swallowing difficulty after stroke: frequency, recovery, and prognosis.
  326. Arm function after stroke: measurement and recovery over the first three months.
  327. Functional abilities after stroke: measurement, natural history and prognosis.
  328. Neurological rehabilitation
  329. The natural history of visual neglect after stroke Indications from two methods of assessment
  330. Effects of living with and looking after survivors of a stroke.
  331. Services for stroke patients one year after stroke.
  332. Driving after a Stroke
  333. Aphasia after stroke: a detailed study of recovery in the first 3 months
  334. Aphasia after stroke: natural history and associated deficits.
  335. Epidemiology of some neurological diseases with special reference to work load on the NHS
  336. Loss of arm function after stroke: measurement, frequency, and recovery
  337. Memory disturbance after stroke: frequency and associated losses
  338. The Frenchay Aphasia Screening Test: a short, simple test for aphasia appropriate for non-specialists
  339. Hospital admission for acute stroke: who, for how long, and to what effect?
  340. Outlook After an Acute Stroke: Urinary Incontinence and Loss of Consciousness Compared in 532 Patients
  341. CONTROLLED TRIAL OF A HOME-CARE SERVICE FOR ACUTE STROKE PATIENTS
  342. Recovery after stroke--the first 3 months.
  343. Social activities after stroke: Measurement and natural history using the Frenchay Activities Index
  344. LONG-TERM SURVIVAL AFTER STROKE
  345. STROKE: THE INFLUENCE OF AGE UPON OUTCOME
  346. Therapy after stroke: Amounts, determinants and effects
  347. The hemiplegic arm after stroke: measurement and recovery.
  348. WHY ADMIT STROKE PATIENTS TO HOSPITAL?
  349. Recovery after stroke
  350. Augmented home nursing as an alternative to hospital care for chronic elderly invalids
  351. Neurological emergencies.