Effectiveness of interventions involving nurses in secondary stroke prevention: A systematic review and meta-analysis
European Journal of Cardiovascular Nursing

Abstract
Among members of the health care team, nurses play a large role in actively engaging stroke survivors in secondary stroke prevention programs. This systematic review and meta-analysis examines the effectiveness of interventions in which nurses have a primary role on modification of risk factors among stroke survivors.
We systematically searched for randomized controlled trials in relevant databases investigating the role of nurses in secondary stroke prevention. Meta-analyses were conducted using Cochrane Review Manager Software. The mean pooled effect size, a 95% confidence interval (CI), and
Sixteen randomized controlled trials were included with a total of 3568 stroke and transient ischemic attack patients. After removing one outlier, the models demonstrated a statistically significant effect on reducing systolic blood pressure (SMD = −0.14 (95% CI = −0.23, –0.05),
We found that interventions in which nurses had a primary role were effective on improving medical and behavioral risk factors, as well as knowledge of risk factors as part of secondary prevention of stroke.
Contributors

Beena P Parappilly
Author

Thalia S Field
Author

William B Mortenson
Author

Brodie M Sakakibara
Author

Janice J Eng
Author
