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Establishment of a prospective stroke registry may promote the documentation and improvement of acute stroke care. We present the status of stroke management in Greece using the Registry of Stroke Care Quality (RES-Q) dataset.
Consecutive patients with acute stroke were prospectively registered in RES-Q registry by contributing sites in Greece during the years 2017–2021. Demographic and baseline characteristics, acute management, and clinical outcomes at discharge were recorded. Stroke quality metrics, with a specific interest in the association between acute reperfusion therapies and functional recovery in ischemic stroke patients are presented.
A total of 3590 acute stroke patients were treated in 20 Greek sites (61% men, median age 64 years; median baseline NIHSS 4; 74% ischemic stroke). Acute reperfusion therapies were administered in almost 20% of acute ischemic stroke patients, with a door to needle and door to groin puncture times of 40 and 64 min, respectively. After adjustment for contributing sites, the rates of acute reperfusion therapies were higher during the time epoch 2020–2021 compared to 2017–2019 (adjusted OR 1.31; 95% CI 1.04–1.64;
Implementation and maintenance of a nationwide stroke registry in Greece may guide the stroke management planning, so that prompt patient transportation, acute reperfusion therapies, and stroke unit hospitalization become more widely accessible, improving the functional outcomes of stroke patients.
In Turkey, the incidence of acute stroke is increasing, obviously with the contribution of the aging population. With the publication of “Directive on Health Services to be Provided to Patients with Acute Stroke” on July 18, 2019 and its entry into force in March 2021, an important period of catching up and updating has begun in the management of acute stroke patients in our country. During this period, 57 comprehensive stroke centers and 51 primary stroke centers were certified. These units have covered approximately 85% of the country’s population. In addition, around 50 interventional neurologists were trained and became the directors of many of these centers. In the following 2 years, the “inme.org.tr campaign” was launched. This campaign, aimed at increasing the public’s knowledge and awareness about stroke, continued unabated during the pandemic period. Now is the time to continue the efforts to ensure homogeneous quality metrics and to develop and continuously improve the established system.
The aim of this analysis was to estimate 1 year and long-term cost and quality of life of ischaemic stroke patients in Croatia. In addition, we aimed to identify and estimate key categories of costs and outcomes driving the burden of stroke in Croatian healthcare system.
Data were derived from analysis of the RES-Q Registry for Croatia in 2018 and supplemented with clinical expert opinion and relevant medical, clinical and economic literature to estimate the course of the disease and treatment patterns in Croatian healthcare system. The health economic model was comprised of a one-year discrete event simulation (DES) mapping real life patient experience and a 10-year Markov model built on existing literature. Cost and health resources use were obtained using Croatian tariffs. Health utilities were mapped to EQ5D from the Barthel Index utilising previously published studies.
The key aspects determining costs and quality of life were rehabilitation, discharge to residential care (currently 13% of patients in Croatia) and recurrent stroke. Total 1 year cost per patient was 18,221 EUR having 0.372 QALYs.
Direct costing structure of ischaemic stroke in Croatia is above the value of upper-middle income countries. Our study showed that post stroke rehabilitation seems to be a strong modifier of future post-stroke costs and further research into various models of post-stroke care and rehabilitation could be the answer into more successful rehabilitation that could increase QALY and reduce the economic burden of stroke. Further investment in rehabilitation research and provision might bring promising opportunities to improve long term patient outcomes.
Armenia is an upper-middle-income country with a population of nearly 3 million. Stroke is one of its major public health problems and ranks as the sixth leading cause of death, with a mortality of 75.5 per 100,000.
Until recently, modern stroke care was not available in Armenia. During the past 8 years substantial advances have been made in building medical infrastructure and delivering acute stroke care. This manuscript describes contributors to this progress, including extensive and long-term collaboration with international stroke experts, the development of hospital-based stroke teams, and a funding commitment for stroke care by the government.
The results of acute stroke revascularization procedures during the past 3 years are reviewed and found to meet international standards. Future directions are discussed including the immediate need to expand acute stroke care to underserved parts of the country by adding primary and comprehensive stroke centers. An active educational program for nurses and physicians and the TeleStroke system development will help support this expansion.
Monitoring and measuring different aspects of stroke care pathway is the cornerstone for improvement of quality. We aim to analyze and give an overview of improvements of stroke care quality in Estonia.
National stroke care quality indicators are collected and reported using reimbursement data and include all adult stroke cases. In Estonia, five stroke-ready hospitals are participating in Registry of Stroke Care Quality (RES-Q), providing data on all stroke patients 1 month every year. Data from the national quality indicators and RES-Q from 2015 to 2021 are presented.
The proportion of intravenous thrombolysis for all Estonian hospitalized ischemic stroke cases increased from 16% (95% Confidence Interval, CI 15%–18%) in 2015 to 28% (95% CI 27%–30%) in 2021. Mechanical thrombectomy was provided to 9% (95% CI 8%–10%) in 2021. The 30-day mortality rate has decreased from 21% (95% CI 20%–23%) to 19% (95% CI 18%–20%). More than 90% of patients with cardioembolic stroke are prescribed anticoagulants at discharge, but only 50% are on anticoagulant treatment 1 year after stroke. Also, the availability of inpatient rehabilitation needs improvement, being 21% (95% CI 20%–23%) in 2021. A total of 848 patients are included in the RES-Q. The proportion of patients receiving recanalization therapies was comparable to the national stroke care quality indicators. All stroke-ready hospitals show good onset-to-door times.
The overall stroke care quality in Estonia is good, especially the availability of recanalization treatments. However, secondary prevention and the availability of rehabilitation services need improvement in the future.
Romania has one of the highest incidences of stroke and one of the highest mortality rates in Europe. The mortality rate due to treatable causes is also very high and is associated with the lowest public spending on healthcare in the European Union. Nonetheless, significant achievements in acute stroke care have been made in Romania in the last 5 years, most notably the increase of the national thrombolysis rate from 0.8% to 5.4%. Numerous educational workshops and constant communication with the stroke centers led to a solid and active stroke network. Due to the joint efforts of this stroke network and the ESO-EAST project, the quality of stroke care has significantly improved. However, Romania still faces many problems: a major lack of specialists in interventional neuroradiology and consequently a low number of stroke patients treated by thrombectomy and carotid revascularization procedures, a low number of neuro-rehabilitation centers and a country-wide lack of neurologists.
Although stroke patients in Slovakia had been treated according to European recommendations, no network of primary and comprehensive stroke centers had been officially established; the ESO recommended quality parameters had not been fulfilled. Therefore, the Slovak Stroke Society decided to change the stroke management concept and introduced mandatory evaluation of quality parameters. This article focuses on key success factors of the change in stroke management in Slovakia and presents the 5-year results and perspectives for the future.
We processed data from the stroke register at the National Health Information Center, which is mandatory in Slovakia for all hospitals designated as primary and secondary stroke care centers.
Since 2016, we have started to change stroke management. New National Guideline for Stroke Care was prepared in 2017 and published in 2018 as a Recommendation of the Ministry of Health of the Slovak Republic. The recommendation included pre-hospital as well as in-hospital stroke care, a network of primary stroke centers (hospitals administering intravenous thrombolysis – 37), and secondary stroke centers (hospitals treating with intravenous thrombolysis + endovascular treatment (ET) – 6). A stroke priority was instituted, having equally high priority as myocardial infarction. More efficient in-hospital workflow and pre-hospital patient triage shortened the time to treatment. Prenotification became mandatory in all hospitals. Non-contrast CT, and CT angiography is mandatory in all hospitals. In patients with suspected proximal large-vessel occlusion the EMS stays at the CT facility in primary stroke centers until the CT angiography is finished. If LVO is confirmed, the patient is transported to an EVT secondary stroke center by the same EMS. From 2019 all secondary stroke centers offer endovascular thrombectomy in a 24/7/365 system. We consider the introduction of quality control one of the most critical steps in stroke management. The result of these activities is 25.2% of patients treated with IVT and 10.2% by endovascular treatment, and median DNT 30 min. Number of patients screened for dysphagia increased from 26.4% in 2019 to 85.9% in 2020. In the most of the hospitals the proportion of ischemic stroke patients discharged with antiplatelets and in case of AF with anticoagulants was >85%.
Our results indicate that it is possible to change stroke management at a single hospital and national level. For continuous and further improvement, regular quality monitoring is necessary; therefore, the results of stroke hospital management are presented regularly once a year at national and international level. Collaboration with the “Second for Life” patient organization is very important for the “time is brain” campaign in Slovakia.
Due to the change in stroke management over the last 5 years, we have reduced the time for acute stroke treatment and improved the proportion of patients with acute treatment, and in this area, we have achieved and exceeded the goals of the Stroke Action Plan for Europe for 2018–2030. Nevertheless, we still have many insufficiencies in stroke rehabilitation and post-stroke nursing that need to be addressed.