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Two years’ experience of implementing a comprehensive telemedical stroke network comprising in mainly rural region: the Transregional Network for Stroke Intervention with Telemedicine (TRANSIT-Stroke)

BACKGROUND: Telemedicine improves the quality of acute stroke care in rural regions with limited access to specialized stroke care. We report the first 2 years’ experience of implementing a comprehensive telemedical stroke network comprising all levels of stroke care in a defined region. METHODS: Th...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Gabriel, Katharina M. A., Jírů-Hillmann, Steffi, Kraft, Peter, Selig, Udo, Rücker, Viktoria, Mühler, Johannes, Dötter, Klaus, Keidel, Matthias, Soda, Hassan, Rascher, Alexandra, Schneider, Rolf, Pfau, Mathias, Hoffmann, Roy, Stenzel, Joachim, Benghebrid, Mohamed, Goebel, Tobias, Doerck, Sebastian, Kramer, Daniela, Haeusler, Karl Georg, Volkmann, Jens, Heuschmann, Peter U., Fluri, Felix
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7081707/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32192438
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12883-020-01676-6
Descripción
Sumario:BACKGROUND: Telemedicine improves the quality of acute stroke care in rural regions with limited access to specialized stroke care. We report the first 2 years’ experience of implementing a comprehensive telemedical stroke network comprising all levels of stroke care in a defined region. METHODS: The TRANSIT-Stroke network covers a mainly rural region in north-western Bavaria (Germany). All hospitals providing acute stroke care in this region participate in TRANSIT-Stroke, including four hospitals with a supra-regional certified stroke unit (SU) care (level III), three of those providing teleconsultation to two hospitals with a regional certified SU (level II) and five hospitals without specialized SU care (level I). For a two-year-period (01/2015 to 12/2016), data of eight of these hospitals were available; 13 evidence-based quality indicators (QIs) related to processes during hospitalisation were evaluated quarterly and compared according to predefined target values between level-I- and level-II/III-hospitals. RESULTS: Overall, 7881 patients were included (mean age 74.6 years ±12.8; 48.4% female). In level-II/III-hospitals adherence of all QIs to predefined targets was high ab initio. In level-I-hospitals, three patterns of QI-development were observed: a) high adherence ab initio (31%), mainly in secondary stroke prevention; b) improvement over time (44%), predominantly related to stroke specific diagnosis and in-hospital organization; c) no clear time trends (25%). Overall, 10 out of 13 QIs reached predefined target values of quality of care at the end of the observation period. CONCLUSION: The implementation of the comprehensive TRANSIT-Stroke network resulted in an improvement of quality of care in level-I-hospitals.