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Abstract TP47: Emergency Medical Services Time Intervals For Suspected Stroke Patients In The United States

Authors :
Rebecca E Cash
Krislyn M Boggs
Christopher T Richards
Carlos A Camargo
Kori S Zachrison
Source :
Stroke. 53
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health), 2022.

Abstract

Introduction: Prehospital recognition and rapid transport of stroke patients by emergency medical services (EMS) is critical to optimize access to time-sensitive care. We aimed to describe EMS time intervals for suspected stroke patients in the U.S. and to quantify variation in EMS time intervals by geographic location and urbanicity. Methods: We conducted a cross-sectional evaluation of EMS 9-1-1 activations (i.e., calls for service) included in the 2018 and 2019 National EMS Information System. We included ground and air EMS activations for a scene response where a patient aged ≥18 years old with suspected stroke (EMS impression of I60-I63 or G45) was treated and transported by EMS. Time intervals for dispatch, response, scene, transport, and total prehospital time were calculated, stratified by ground and air transport type. Results: A total of 415,342 activations for suspected stroke were included, of which 98% were a ground transport. The overall median total prehospital time for ground transports was 35 minutes (IQR 27-45, 90 th percentile 58; Table). Median total prehospital time for air transports was substantially longer at 56 minutes (IQR 43-70, 90 th percentile 86). Times varied by census division and urbanicity with the shortest median total prehospital time of ground transports in the East North Central division (31 min, IQR 25-40) and urban areas (34 min, IQR 27-43) and longest times in the East South Central (39 min, IQR 30-52), rural (40 min, IQR 28-56), and frontier (44 min, IQR 29-63) areas. Conclusions: With ongoing focus on optimizing time-to-treatment for acute stroke interventions, prehospital transport can be targeted for quality improvement. While some variation is expected due to geographical constraints, we found substantial variation in prehospital transport times for suspected stroke that may present opportunities for future improvement. These findings may inform health services research and policy efforts to improve stroke care access.

Details

ISSN :
15244628 and 00392499
Volume :
53
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Stroke
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........e58e624c80c559a4cb204c40ede966c9