Home/Our Results/Research/Cochrane Systematic Review Finds Only Low-to-Moderate Evidence That Repetitive Task Training Supports Upper Limb Progress After Stroke

Cochrane Systematic Review Finds Only Low-to-Moderate Evidence That Repetitive Task Training Supports Upper Limb Progress After Stroke

Cochrane Systematic Review Finds Only Low-to-Moderate Evidence That Repetitive Task Training Supports Upper Limb Progress After Stroke
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The Cochrane Collaboration is the gold standard for systematic medical evidence review.

Study Context

The Cochrane Collaboration conducted a systematic review of repetitive task training (RTT), the foundational approach in standard stroke programs, for upper limb progress. The review synthesized evidence from dozens of randomized controlled trials, representing the highest standard of evidence aggregation available in health research.

The Evidence

The review found only low-to-moderate quality evidence that repetitive task training supports upper limb function after stroke. No strong evidence was found that higher doses of task-specific practice drive meaningful progress. The authors are clear: this does not mean progress is impossible. It means the method itself has a limited evidence base.

Key Finding

Cochrane

Low-to-moderate quality evidence for repetitive task training improving upper limb function after stroke, across dozens of randomized controlled trials

What The Research Shows

  • Evidence for RTT improving upper limb function is rated low to moderate quality by Cochrane standards
  • Higher doses of task-specific practice do not show strong evidence of driving meaningful progress
  • The limitation is in the method, not a reflection of the individual’s potential for progress
  • This evidence gap explains why approaches grounded in different movement principles are of growing scientific interest
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Cochrane Systematic Review of Repetitive Task Training

What This May Mean For You

If repetitive task training has not delivered the progress you hoped for, this Cochrane review, the most rigorous form of evidence synthesis in medicine, offers important context. The most widely used stroke approach has one of the weakest evidence bases for the outcomes people most care about.

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