1. Regional Learning Collaboratives Produce Rapid and Sustainable Improvements in Stroke Thrombolysis Times.
- Author
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Shyam Prabhakaran, Jungwha Lee, O'Neill, Kathleen, Prabhakaran, Shyam, and Lee, Jungwha
- Subjects
HOSPITAL medical staff ,STROKE diagnosis ,HEALTH facility employees ,FIBRINOLYTIC agents ,CEREBRAL ischemia ,CLINICAL medicine ,COMPARATIVE studies ,COOPERATIVENESS ,EMPLOYEE orientation ,HEALTH care teams ,INTERPROFESSIONAL relations ,LEARNING ,RESEARCH methodology ,MEDICAL care ,MEDICAL cooperation ,CONTINUING education of nurses ,PATIENTS ,QUALITY assurance ,RESEARCH ,STROKE ,THROMBOLYTIC therapy ,TIME ,TISSUE plasminogen activator ,CONTINUING medical education ,EVALUATION research ,KEY performance indicators (Management) ,TREATMENT effectiveness ,EVALUATION of human services programs ,HOSPITAL nursing staff ,EDUCATION ,DIAGNOSIS - Abstract
Background: Reduction in door-to-needle (DTN) times in patients with acute ischemic stroke treated with tissue-type plasminogen activator is associated with improved outcomes. We hypothesized that a learning collaborative would rapidly reduce DTN times at Chicago's primary stroke centers.Methods and Results: We analyzed data from all adult patients with out-of-hospital ischemic stroke hospitalized between January 1, 2010 and March 31, 2015 and who received tissue-type plasminogen activator in the emergency department at 15 primary stroke centers in Chicago and 15 primary stroke centers in St. Louis. We implemented a structured learning collaborative in Chicago in quarter 1 of 2013 that included (1) a quality improvement leader, (2) stroke content expert, (3) multidisciplinary teams from each site, (4) a targeted goal for the program (DTN time <60 minutes in >50% of patients treated with tissue-type plasminogen activator), and (5) face-to-face meetings with on-site visits. We used interrupted time-series analysis to compare the impact of the learning collaborative on DTN times in Chicago pre- and post implementation and also concurrently versus St. Louis. We prespecified adjustment for mode of arrival, emergency medical services prenotification, and onset-to-arrival times. P values less than 0.05 were considered significant. In adjusted analysis, the reduction in DTN time within 1 quarter of implementation was 15.5 minutes (P=0.046) at Chicago sites versus 1.17 minutes at St. Louis sites (P=0.601).Conclusions: Using a learning collaborative model at Chicago's 15 primary stroke centers, we observed major reductions in DTN times within 1 quarter of implementation. Regional collaboration and best practices sharing should be a model for rapid and sustainable system-wide quality improvement. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2016
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