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. 2018 May 7;2018(5):CD009103. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD009103.pub3

Joubert 2009.

Study characteristics
Methods RCT
Unit of randomisation: participant
Participants Place of recruitment: hospital
Numbers randomised: total: 233 (I: 123; C: 110)
% Completing final follow‐up: 80%
Inclusion criteria: ischaemic stroke, parenchymal haemorrhage or TIA; aged ≥ 20 years
Exclusion criteria: not managed by GP; discharged to nursing home; serious co‐morbidities; non‐English speaking; serious cognitive impairment; significantly aphasic
Type of stroke (%): ischaemic (I: 73%; C: 80%); haemorrhagic (I: 10%: C: 7%); TIA (I: 17%; C: 13%)
Mean age (SD): I: 63.4 (13.7); C: 68.2 (12.7)
Gender (% men): I: 58%; C: 52%
Ethnicity: not reported
Socio‐economic or socio‐demographic status: not reported
Interventions Intervention details (components, length, frequency): "shared care" program; risk factor targets derived from National guidelines and consensus statements; medication initiated in hospital; lifestyle education provided by nurse coordinator; GP appointments pre‐arranged for 2 weeks, 3 months, 6 months, 9 months and 12 months post‐discharge; recommendations and evidence‐based guidelines sent to GP; nurse co‐ordinator telephoned participants before and after every GP visit to screen for depression; risk factor data collected at each GP visit and faxed to nurse co‐ordinator; nurse co‐ordinator facilitated transfer of information and recommendations between stroke specialists and GPs; GPs able to telephone stroke specialist for advice
Location: community
Mode of delivery: telephone follow‐up; information management
Personnel responsible for delivery: stroke specialists, a nurse co‐ordinator and participants' GPs
Timing post‐stroke: intervention initiated before hospital discharge
Control: standard care from GP
Outcomes 12 months: SBP; DBP, total cholesterol, BMI, systolic BP < 140 mmHg; total cholesterol < 5.18 mmol/L; proportion of AF patients taking warfarin
General Information Funding: this research was funded by a Commonwealth of Australia General Practice Evaluation Program grant
Country of origin: Australia
Publication language: English
Notes Analysis method: not stated
Risk of bias: unclear
Risk of bias
Bias Authors' judgement Support for judgement
Random sequence generation (selection bias) Low risk "Computer‐generated process"
"At a later stage, the coordinator checked the patient’s GP, and if this GP was also responsible for a different patient already in the trial, the current patient was assigned to the same group as the previous patient"
Allocation concealment (selection bias) Low risk "The allocation to group was undertaken after consent, so the coordinator was unaware of treatment allocation prior to consent"
Incomplete outcome data (attrition bias)
All outcomes Low risk Missing data reported by group
Attrition: I: 32/123 (7 unwilling to participate; 2 withdrew due to other medical problems, 2 changed GP; 11 withdrew for unknown reasons; 3 did not have stroke; 3 not contactable; 2 died; 1 moved to nursing home; 1 GP refused); C: 15/110 (2 unwilling to participate; 1 left country; 3 withdrew for unknown reasons; 2 did not have stroke; 1 not contactable; 6 died)
Judgement: imbalances in missing data between the groups; however the review authors judged that this was unlikely to be related to study outcomes
Selective reporting (reporting bias) Unclear risk Insufficient information (protocol not obtained)
Other bias Low risk The study appears to be free of other sources of bias