Abstract
The goal was to evaluate the effectiveness of task-specific training on independence levels of activities of daily living on people post-stroke. Occupational therapy offers many intervention strategies for people post-stroke. As of right now there is a lack of evidence in the literature that proves what is the best intervention for this population. Task-specific training is an intervention approach that uses repetitive practice for a client-centered task to regain the skills needed to perform the meaningful occupation. It was found that task-specific training lead to increased independence in activities of daily living and functional activity compared to conventional rehab alone.