Stroke patient's alarm choice: General practitioner or emergency medical services

被引:2
|
作者
Nguyen, T. Truc My [1 ]
Kruyt, Nyika D. [1 ]
Pierik, Jorien G. J. [2 ]
Doggen, Carine J. M. [3 ,4 ,5 ]
van der Lugt, Peter [6 ]
Ramessersing, Saager A. V. [1 ]
Wijers, Naomi T. [1 ]
Brouwers, Paul J. A. M. [7 ]
Wermer, Marieke J. H. [1 ]
den Hertog, Heleen M. [8 ]
机构
[1] Leiden Univ, Med Ctr, Dept Neurol, K5-103,Albinusdreef 2, NL-2300 RC Leiden, Netherlands
[2] Med Spectrum Twente, Dept Transmural Care, Enschede, Netherlands
[3] Tech Med Ctr, Dept Hlth Technol & Serv Res, Enschede, Netherlands
[4] Tech Med Ctr, Fac Behav Management & Social Sci, Enschede, Netherlands
[5] Rijnstate Arnhem, Dept Sci, Arnhem, Netherlands
[6] Het Doktershuis, Haaksbergen, Netherlands
[7] Med Spectrum Twente, Dept Neurol, Enschede, Netherlands
[8] Isala Hosp, Dept Neurol, Zwolle, Netherlands
来源
ACTA NEUROLOGICA SCANDINAVICA | 2021年 / 143卷 / 02期
关键词
emergency medical services; general practitioner; patient delay; patient's choice; stroke; DELAY;
D O I
10.1111/ane.13341
中图分类号
R74 [神经病学与精神病学];
学科分类号
摘要
Objectives Stroke patients should be treated as soon as possible since the benefit of reperfusion therapies is highly time-dependent. The proportion of patients eligible for reperfusion therapy is still limited, as many patients do not immediately alarm healthcare providers. The choice of healthcare system entrance influences the time of arrival in the hospital. Therefore, we assessed differences in these choices to obtain insight for strategies to reduce time delays in acute stroke patients. Materials and Methods Patients with suspected acute stroke admitted to the participating hospitals received a questionnaire. We assessed differences between patients who initially alarmed the general practitioner (GP) and patients who directly alarmed the emergency medical services (EMS). Additionally, we assessed regional differences and patient trajectories after medical help was sought. Results We included 163 patients. Most patients alarmed the GP as primary healthcare provider (n = 104; 64%), and median onset-to-door times were longer in these patients (466 minutes [IQR 149-1586]) compared to patients directly alarming the EMS (n = 59; 36%) (90 minutes [IQR 45-286]). This was even more pronounced in less densely populated areas. Patients who alarmed the GP first, more often had patient delay >15 minutes, hesitated to burden healthcare providers and underestimated symptomatology. Conclusions Our results showed that patients who alarmed the GP first instead of the EMS differed in several factors that are potentially modifiable. Strategies to achieve reduction of vital prehospital time delays and to improve patient outcome are optimizing public awareness campaigns and GP triage along with adjusting current guidelines by enabling and focusing on immediate involvement of the EMS once acute stroke is suspected.
引用
收藏
页码:164 / 170
页数:7
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