Researchers looked at 18 studies about how stroke rehabilitation teams work with patients to set recovery goals. They wanted to understand the procedures used when making goals patient-centered. The studies included both adults recovering from stroke and the clinicians helping them.
The review found that goal-setting conversations mostly happen at the beginning of rehabilitation. Different teams and therapists use different methods, and there's no overall agreement on the best way to do it. The researchers also identified gaps in how teams coordinate when patients move between different care settings (like from hospital to home care) and in how they monitor and evaluate whether goals are being met.
No safety concerns or negative effects were reported in the review, as it focused on describing processes, not measuring patient outcomes. The main reason to be careful is that this was a scoping review—it maps out what research exists but doesn't provide strong evidence about which goal-setting methods work best for recovery. Readers should understand that while the review highlights areas where practice could improve, it doesn't prove that changing these procedures will lead to better rehabilitation results.