Researchers analyzed 10 previous studies involving 1,046 stroke survivors to understand a concept called posttraumatic growth (PTG). PTG refers to positive psychological changes some people report after a difficult event, such as finding new meaning or feeling stronger. The studies measured PTG at different times after people left the hospital.
The main finding was that average PTG scores showed a significant, gradual increase at each month following discharge. This suggests that for some survivors, this sense of personal growth may develop over time. The analysis also found that higher levels of PTG were associated with having more education, engaging in active thinking about the stroke experience, and having stronger social support from others.
It is important to understand what this research does and does not show. The findings are based on observational studies, which can only show links or associations, not cause and effect. We cannot say that education or social support causes growth, only that they were related in these studies. Furthermore, posttraumatic growth is not a universal or required outcome after stroke; many factors influence a person's recovery journey.
Readers should take from this that some stroke survivors do report positive personal changes over time, and certain factors like social support are linked to this experience. However, this is an area of ongoing research, and the findings do not provide a roadmap for how to achieve growth.