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Regional variation in acute stroke care organisation

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journal contribution
posted on 2017-11-22, 10:27 authored by P Muñoz Venturelli, Thompson Robinson, PM Lavados, VV Olavarría, H Arima, L Billot, ML Hackett, JY Lim, S Middleton, O Pontes-Neto, B Peng, L Cui, L Song, G Mead, C Watkins, R-T Lin, T-H Lee, J Pandian, HA de Silva, CS Anderson, HeadPoST Investigators
BACKGROUND: Few studies have assessed regional variation in the organisation of stroke services, particularly health care resourcing, presence of protocols and discharge planning. Our aim was to compare stroke care organisation within middle- (MIC) and high-income country (HIC) hospitals participating in the Head Position in Stroke Trial (HeadPoST). METHODS: HeadPoST is an on-going international multicenter crossover cluster-randomized trial of 'sitting-up' versus 'lying-flat' head positioning in acute stroke. As part of the start-up phase, one stroke care organisation questionnaire was completed at each hospital. The World Bank gross national income per capita criteria were used for classification. RESULTS: 94 hospitals from 9 countries completed the questionnaire, 51 corresponding to MIC and 43 to HIC. Most participating hospitals had a dedicated stroke care unit/ward, with access to diagnostic services and expert stroke physicians, and offering intravenous thrombolysis. There was no difference for the presence of a dedicated multidisciplinary stroke team, although greater access to a broad spectrum of rehabilitation therapists in HIC compared to MIC hospitals was observed. Significantly more patients arrived within a 4-h window of symptoms onset in HIC hospitals (41 vs. 13%; P<0.001), and a significantly higher proportion of acute ischemic stroke patients received intravenous thrombolysis (10 vs. 5%; P=0.002) compared to MIC hospitals. CONCLUSIONS: Although all hospitals provided advanced care for people with stroke, differences were found in stroke care organisation and treatment. Future multilevel analyses aims to determine the influence of specific organisational factors on patient outcomes.

History

Citation

Journal of the Neurological Sciences, 2016, 371, pp. 126-130

Author affiliation

/Organisation/COLLEGE OF MEDICINE, BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES AND PSYCHOLOGY/School of Medicine/Department of Cardiovascular Sciences

Version

  • AM (Accepted Manuscript)

Published in

Journal of the Neurological Sciences

Publisher

Elsevier for World Federation of Neurology

issn

0022-510X

eissn

1878-5883

Acceptance date

2016-10-17

Copyright date

2016

Available date

2017-11-22

Publisher version

http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0022510X16306657?via=ihub

Language

en