Title: RURAL MANAGEMENT OF STROKE
1RURAL MANAGEMENT OF STROKE
- GP TELECONFERENCE Sept 7 2009
2Stroke Demographics
- 48,000 strokes/year in Australia
- 12,000 deaths/year
- Stroke causes 25 of all chronic disability
- Direct and Indirect costs gt 1.75 billion
annually - In NSW, Death rates are higher in outer regional
and remote areas compared to metropolitan areas - Stroke death rates 2.2 times higher for
aboriginal population
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4Rural/Regional 1,788,000 26 of NSW total
Sydney/Hunter/Wollongong 5,179,000 74 of NSW
total
ABS indicators 12/08 NSW total 6,967,000
5Rural/Regional NSW
- Equivalent populations
- Tasmania x 3.75
- or
- South Australia Geelong
- or
- Brisbane
6Rural/Regional NSW
- Stroke Care Units/Service Enhancement
- Armidale
- Bathurst
- Coffs Harbour
- Dubbo
- Orange
- Port Macquarie
- Tamworth
- Shoalhaven
- Wagga Wagga
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9ASSESSING RURAL AWARENESS OF THE NATIONAL FAST
CAMPAIGN
- How effective is a national campaign in a rural
setting? - 298 participants at the Henty agricultural field
days - Undertaken the week after National Stroke Week
- Awareness of the FAST campaign
- Ability to define the individual FAST acronym
objects - Mohr,K Assessing the Awareness of the national
FAST campaign in a rural setting. Poster
SmartStrokes 2009
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11ASSESSING RURAL AWARENESS OF THE NATIONAL FAST
CAMPAIGN
12ASSESSING RURAL AWARENESS OF THE NATIONAL FAST
CAMPAIGN
- 33 had heard of FAST
- 12 of the surveyed population could define some
or all of the FAST acronym - The majority define that initial response to a
stroke is to call an ambulance - The minority of patients admitted to WWBH Stroke
Unit call and ambulance at stroke onset
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14Pre-hospital epidemiology of suspected stroke
patients in NSW
- Romesh Markus, Paul Middleton, Sowmya Anand, Mark
Longworth, Judy Simpson, Julie Newman,
Mary-Louise McLaws
15AIMS
- Number of 000 calls for potential stroke
- Proportion within one hour of symptom onset
- Agreement between call takers and paramedics
- Is there a difference in prehospital response
times for Rural and Metro Areas? - In Metro NSW, proportion of stroke patients taken
to hospitals with SCUs
16Prehospital response times for potential
strokes Rural versus Metro NSW
17000 calls within 1 hour of onset of suspected
stroke
18Summary
- 000 Call to hospital arrival times
- gt80 transferred within 60 minutes
- Rural median 37.3 (IQR 23.4)
- Metro median 42.7 (IQR 18)
- NSW Metro
- 83 of suspected stroke patients taken to
hospitals with SCUs
19Acute Access to Stroke Care
- Fewer rural patients call an ambulance within 1
hour of symptom onset. 6 vs. 17 - Rural patients arrive at hospital faster on
average. 37 vs. 43 minutes - 83 of metro patients are taken to a Stroke Care
Unit - Where are rural patients taken?
209
23
86
32
19
8
19
28
20
12
21
187
5
26
3
6
7
- Stroke admissions 1/Jan-3/Dec 2008
219
23
86
32
19
8
19
28
20
12
21
187
5
26
3
6
7
- Stroke admissions 1/Jan-3/Dec 2008
- No CT access on site
229
23
86
32
19
8
19
28
20
12
21
187
5
26
3
6
7
- Stroke admissions 1/Jan-3/Dec 2008
- 100km radius from Wagga 187 147
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24Effectiveness of Intervention
- INTERVENTION NNT
- Atrial fibrillation anticoagulation
- Apirin
- Carotid stenosis (gt70 symptomatic)
- Clopidogrel/Asasantin
- Hypertension management
- Smoking cessation
- Stroke unit care
25Effectiveness of Intervention
- INTERVENTION NNT
- Apirin 100
- Clopidogrel/Asasantin 80
- Hypertension management 50
- Smoking cessation 43
- Carotid stenosis (gt70 symptomatic) 24
- Stroke unit care 18
- Atrial fibrillation anticoagulation 12
26TIA MANAGEMENT
- 1 year risk of stroke after TIA 10.5
- (50 within the first 2 days)
- TIAs with a worse prognosis
- Increased age
- Duration greater than 10 minutes
- Limb weakness and speech disturbance
27ABCD² Score
28stroke risk based on ABCD² score
29Stroke Unit Management
- Rate of death or dependency reduced from 62.0 to
56.4 - 1 extra survivor for every 33 patients treated
- 1 extra patient discharged home for every 20
treated - Is more effective than management in a rehab
ward, by a mobile stroke team, or in a general
medical ward - Is effective, independent of whether run by
neurologist, physician, geriatrician or GP, as
long as expertise in stroke management is present
30Which stroke intervention provides the greatest
community benefit?
- North East Melbourne Stroke Incidence Study
- 306,631 people
- 645 strokes managed in hospital
- For every 1,000 patients treated, the number
saved from death and dependency - Stroke Unit Management 46
- Aspirin 6
- tPA (3 hour) 11
- Gilligan et al Cerebrovascular Diseases. 20(4)
239-244, 2005
31Which stroke intervention provides the greatest
community benefit?
- tPA is the most potent intervention
- Stroke Unit Management is the most broadly
applicable, and provides the greatest community
benefit - Is there any reason to prioritise thrombolysis in
regional centres?
32Rural tPA implementation
- The case for tPA implementation in rural NSW
- Equity in patient care
- The capacity to deliver tPA drives an upgrade in
stroke care services generally - Enables a coordinated message for stroke
management in the state - Is politically sexy
33Statewide Comprehensive Stroke Care
- Improve Community Stroke action awareness and
early ambulance contact - Ambulance system for diversion of acute stroke
patients to appropriate centres - Acute stroke assessment and scoring (NIHSS) by
local expertise - Neurologist/Physician/Intensivist where possible
- Metro SCU training for Medical registrars who
currently provide Statewide medical support
through IMET - Imaging assessment and thrombolysis approval via
PACS/Web based access to local expertise if
possible, or metro support if necessary - Continued rural SCU care or transfer via protocol
- Ongoing audit, SITS registration etc.
34Statewide Comprehensive Stroke Care
- Maintains substantial rural independence
- Medical registrar staffing and Web imaging access
require no significant infrastructure enhancement - Requires buy in from metro on call system
- Insurance and Liability issues need embedding
- Payment
- May enhance metro lysis rates
- Increases a stroke expert group of medical
trainees - Would benefit from more formalised links between
metro and rural SCUs - May act as a substrate for other health
services/disease models
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