New approach lets therapists share skills to cut wait times and boost recovery
Why stroke recovery feels so fragmented
After a stroke, every day matters. The first weeks and months are critical for regaining speech, movement, and independence. But for many survivors, the path to recovery is full of roadblocks.
You might see a physical therapist for walking, a speech therapist for swallowing, and an occupational therapist for daily tasks—all in separate appointments, often weeks apart. Each therapist works hard, but they rarely talk to each other. The result? Conflicting advice, duplicated tests, and delays that can slow recovery.
This isn’t just frustrating—it’s common. In primary care settings, allied health professionals (like therapists and rehab specialists) often work in silos. They’re trained in their own disciplines but don’t always coordinate care. For stroke survivors, this fragmented system can mean missed opportunities and slower progress.
What’s missing in current stroke care
Stroke is a leading cause of long-term disability worldwide. In the U.S. alone, nearly 800,000 people have a stroke each year. Many survive but face lasting challenges: trouble walking, speaking, eating, or managing daily life.
Primary care is where most stroke survivors receive ongoing rehab. But here’s the problem: allied health professionals—physical therapists, occupational therapists, speech-language pathologists—often work in parallel, not together. They may share a building but not a plan.
This leads to:
- Duplicated assessments (multiple therapists asking the same questions)
- Conflicting advice (one therapist says rest, another says move)
- Long waits between appointments
- Gaps in care when one discipline is booked out for months
For patients and families, this feels like a maze with no map. For clinicians, it’s inefficient and stressful.
The old way vs. the new way
Traditionally, stroke rehab follows a multidisciplinary model. Each therapist works within their own scope: PTs handle movement, OTs handle daily tasks, SLPs handle speech and swallowing. They may consult briefly, but each keeps their own notes and schedule.
But here’s the twist: research shows that transdisciplinary collaboration—where therapists train to share skills—can improve outcomes and reduce costs.
In this model, one therapist might take extra training to safely perform tasks usually done by another discipline. For example, a physical therapist could learn basic swallowing checks, or an occupational therapist could learn simple speech exercises. They still consult specialists for complex cases, but they handle routine tasks faster.
This isn’t about replacing therapists—it’s about skill-sharing to reduce delays and improve coordination.
How shared skills can cut delays
Think of stroke rehab like a relay race. Each therapist holds a baton (the patient’s care plan), but they pass it slowly—or sometimes drop it—because they’re not fully synced.
Transdisciplinary collaboration is like giving every runner a map and a radio. They can hand off the baton smoothly because they understand each other’s roles.
Here’s how it works in practice:
- Cross-training: Therapists complete extra competency training to safely perform tasks outside their usual scope.
- Shared plans: A single care plan guides all therapists, reducing duplication.
- Flexible roles: If one therapist is booked, another can step in for routine tasks.
This approach is already used in some rural areas where specialists are scarce. Now, researchers say it could work in primary care settings too.
A closer look at the study
This perspective paper, published in Frontiers in Medicine (April 2026), isn’t a clinical trial. It’s a conceptual framework—a blueprint for how transdisciplinary collaboration could work in primary care stroke rehab.
The authors reviewed existing research and clinical examples to build a case for this model. They focused on five key considerations: 1. Healthcare settings and jurisdiction (rules vary by region) 2. Consumer needs (what patients actually want) 3. Workforce availability (can we train enough therapists?) 4. Clinician attributes and skills (who’s ready for this?) 5. Team collaboration rules (how to make it work day-to-day)
They also shared real-world examples, like a physical therapist in rural Australia who learned swallowing checks to reduce delays for stroke patients.
The paper argues that transdisciplinary collaboration is feasible and beneficial in primary care stroke rehab. Key findings include:
- Better coordination: Shared plans reduce duplicated assessments and conflicting advice.
- Faster access: Patients see therapists sooner when roles are flexible.
- Lower costs: Fewer appointments and less duplication save money.
- Higher satisfaction: Patients and clinicians report feeling more supported.
One example showed a 30% reduction in wait times for speech therapy after a physical therapist took swallowing training. Another found that patients recovered mobility faster when OTs and PTs shared exercise plans.
But here’s the catch: this isn’t a proven fix yet. The paper is a proposal, not a clinical trial. It’s based on theory, early examples, and expert opinion—not large-scale data.
This is where things get interesting
The authors aren’t saying this model is perfect. They’re saying it’s worth trying—and they’ve laid out a roadmap to make it happen.
What experts are saying
The authors challenge healthcare leaders, managers, and policymakers to rethink how stroke rehab is delivered. They argue that the current multidisciplinary model is outdated and inefficient.
“We need to move beyond silos,” they write. “Transdisciplinary collaboration offers a path to more efficient, patient-centered care.”
But they also caution that success depends on careful planning. Training, trust, and clear rules are essential.
If you’re a stroke survivor or caregiver, this model could mean:
- Fewer appointments and less time in waiting rooms
- More coordinated care with less confusion
- Faster progress toward recovery goals
This doesn’t mean this treatment is available yet. The model is still being tested. If you’re in stroke rehab now, talk to your care team about how they coordinate care. Ask if they share notes or have a unified plan.
This paper is a conceptual framework, not a clinical study. It’s based on theory, early examples, and expert opinion—not large-scale trials. The authors acknowledge that more research is needed to test this model in real-world settings.
The next step is pilot testing. Researchers and healthcare systems need to: 1. Design training programs for cross-disciplinary skills 2. Test the model in primary care settings 3. Measure outcomes like wait times, patient satisfaction, and recovery speed 4. Refine the approach based on what works
If successful, this model could reshape how stroke rehab is delivered—not just in primary care, but across healthcare. But it will take time, funding, and collaboration to make it happen.