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Lee Chung, MD, a stroke neurologist withfaculty appointments at the University of Utah Hospital and the Salt Lake City VA, hosts this episode. His clinical, educational, and research work spans both institutions. Dr. Chung interviews Alexandra Terrill, PhD, a clinical psychologist specializing in stroke, quality of life, and rehabilitation. Dr. Terrill brings more than 15 years of experience in mixed‑methods and community‑engaged intervention development and serves as co‑director of the Center for Quality of Life after Stroke.
Terrill shares her academic path, what drew her to work with stroke survivors, and the rewards and challenges of caring for patients and supporting families navigating life after stroke. Chung and Terrill explore how healthcare professionals can elevate post‑stroke care by providing appropriate resources and interventions that meaningfully improve quality of life.
Rehabilitation Physicians (Physiatrists)—who lead post‑stroke recovery—will find their conversation particularly relevant. Listeners will learn how to counsel patients who are “medically cleared” yet continue to feel impaired, along with guidance on what additional care may be needed. The episode also emphasizes the importance of identifying caregiver burnout and offers practical questions to help clinicians uncover it.
Neuro-critical care physicians, neurologists, vascular neurologists, neurosurgeons, hospitalists, and emergency medicine physicians will gain a clearer understanding of the full continuum of stroke care and how to effectively guide their patients through the next steps in recovery.
Learn more and access stroke information and resources:
The Center for Quality of Life (QOL) after Stroke
Neurology Patient Services
Craig H. Neilsen Rehabilitation Hospital – Stroke Recovery Program
ReStoreD – Resilience, Stroke, Dyad
TRAILS – Technology Recreation Access Independence Lifestyle Sports
Visit uofuhealth.org/medpod for podcast and information on CME credit.
UPSPRING- Science and Psychology of Resilience in Neurorehabilitation Group
By University of Utah Health5
1414 ratings
Lee Chung, MD, a stroke neurologist withfaculty appointments at the University of Utah Hospital and the Salt Lake City VA, hosts this episode. His clinical, educational, and research work spans both institutions. Dr. Chung interviews Alexandra Terrill, PhD, a clinical psychologist specializing in stroke, quality of life, and rehabilitation. Dr. Terrill brings more than 15 years of experience in mixed‑methods and community‑engaged intervention development and serves as co‑director of the Center for Quality of Life after Stroke.
Terrill shares her academic path, what drew her to work with stroke survivors, and the rewards and challenges of caring for patients and supporting families navigating life after stroke. Chung and Terrill explore how healthcare professionals can elevate post‑stroke care by providing appropriate resources and interventions that meaningfully improve quality of life.
Rehabilitation Physicians (Physiatrists)—who lead post‑stroke recovery—will find their conversation particularly relevant. Listeners will learn how to counsel patients who are “medically cleared” yet continue to feel impaired, along with guidance on what additional care may be needed. The episode also emphasizes the importance of identifying caregiver burnout and offers practical questions to help clinicians uncover it.
Neuro-critical care physicians, neurologists, vascular neurologists, neurosurgeons, hospitalists, and emergency medicine physicians will gain a clearer understanding of the full continuum of stroke care and how to effectively guide their patients through the next steps in recovery.
Learn more and access stroke information and resources:
The Center for Quality of Life (QOL) after Stroke
Neurology Patient Services
Craig H. Neilsen Rehabilitation Hospital – Stroke Recovery Program
ReStoreD – Resilience, Stroke, Dyad
TRAILS – Technology Recreation Access Independence Lifestyle Sports
Visit uofuhealth.org/medpod for podcast and information on CME credit.
UPSPRING- Science and Psychology of Resilience in Neurorehabilitation Group

112,194 Listeners