
Our goal was to determine if a statewide Emergency Medical Services (EMSs) Stroke Triage and Destination Plan (STDP), specifying bypass of hospitals unable to routinely treat stroke patients with thrombolytics (community hospitals), changed bypass frequency of those hospitals.Using a statewide EMS database, we identified stroke patients eligible for community hospital bypass and compared bypass frequency 1-year before and after STDP implementation.Symptom onset time was missing for 48% of pre-STDP (n = 2385) and 29% of post-STDP (n = 1612) cases. Of the remaining cases with geocodable scene addresses, 58% (1301) in the pre-STDP group and 61% (2,078) in the post-STDP group were ineligible for bypass, because a community hospital was not the closest hospital to the stroke event location. Because of missing data records for some EMS agencies in 1 or both study periods, we included EMS agencies from only 49 of 100 North Carolina counties in our analysis. Additionally, we found conflicting hospital classifications by different EMS agencies for 35% of all hospitals (n = 38 of 108). Given these limitations, we found similar community hospital bypass rates before and after STDP implementation (64%, n = 332 of 520 vs. 63%, n = 345 of 552; P = .65).Missing symptom duration time and data records in our state's EMS data system, along with conflicting hospital classifications between EMS agencies limit the ability to study statewide stroke routing protocols. Bypass policies may apply to a minority of patients because a community hospital is not the closest hospital to most stroke events. Given these limitations, we found no difference in community hospital bypass rates after implementation of the STDP.
Aged, 80 and over, Male, Emergency Medical Services, Databases, Factual, Hospitals, Community, Middle Aged, Health Services Accessibility, Regional Health Planning, Time-to-Treatment, Stroke, Transportation of Patients, Treatment Outcome, Catchment Area, Health, Geographic Information Systems, North Carolina, Humans, Female, Thrombolytic Therapy, Aged, Program Evaluation
Aged, 80 and over, Male, Emergency Medical Services, Databases, Factual, Hospitals, Community, Middle Aged, Health Services Accessibility, Regional Health Planning, Time-to-Treatment, Stroke, Transportation of Patients, Treatment Outcome, Catchment Area, Health, Geographic Information Systems, North Carolina, Humans, Female, Thrombolytic Therapy, Aged, Program Evaluation
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