Hanks Natalie, Wen Ge, He Shuhan, Song Sarah, Saver Jeffrey L, Cen Steven, Kim-Tenser May, Mack William, Sanossian Nerses
University of Southern California Keck School of Medicine, Department of Biostatistics, Los Angeles, California.
University of Southern California Keck School of Medicine, Los Angeles, California.
West J Emerg Med. 2014 Jul;15(4):499-503. doi: 10.5811/westjem.2014.2.20388.
Organized stroke systems of care include preferential emergency medical services (EMS) routing to deliver suspected stroke patients to designated hospitals. To characterize the growth and implementation of EMS routing of stroke nationwide, we describe the proportion of stroke hospitalizations in the United States (U.S.) occurring within regions having adopted these protocols.
We collected data on ischemic stroke using International Classification of Diseases-9 (ICD-9) coding from the Healthcare Cost and Utilization Project Nationwide Inpatient Sample (NIS) database from the years 2000-2010. The NIS contains all discharge data from 1,051 hospitals located in 45 states, approximating a 20% stratified sample. We obtained data on EMS systems of care from a review of archives, reports, and interviews with state emergency medical services (EMS) officials. A county or state was considered to be in transition if the protocol was adopted in the calendar year, with establishment in the year following transition.
Nationwide, stroke hospitalizations remained constant over the course of the study period: 583,000 in 2000 and 573,000 in 2010. From 2000-2003 there were no states or counties participating in the NIS with EMS systems of care. The proportion of U.S. stroke hospitalizations occurring in jurisdictions with established EMS regional systems of acute stroke care increased steadily from 2004 to 2010 (1%, 13%, 28%, 30%, 30%, 34%, 49%). In 2010, 278,538 stroke hospitalizations, 49% of all U.S. stroke hospitalizations, occurred in areas with established EMS routing, with an additional 18,979 (3%) patients in regions undergoing a transition to EMS routing.
In 2010, a majority of stroke patients in the U.S. were hospitalized in states with established or transitioning to organized stroke systems of care. This milestone coverage of half the U.S. population is a major advance in systematic stroke care and emphasizes the need for novel approaches to further extend access to stroke center care to all patients.
有组织的中风护理系统包括优先安排紧急医疗服务(EMS),将疑似中风患者送往指定医院。为了描述全国范围内EMS中风转运的发展和实施情况,我们描述了美国采用这些方案的地区内中风住院治疗的比例。
我们使用国际疾病分类第9版(ICD-9)编码,从2000年至2010年的医疗保健成本和利用项目全国住院样本(NIS)数据库中收集缺血性中风的数据。NIS包含来自45个州的1051家医院的所有出院数据,近似于一个20%的分层样本。我们通过查阅档案、报告以及与州紧急医疗服务(EMS)官员进行访谈,获取了EMS护理系统的数据。如果某县或某州在日历年采用了该方案,并在过渡后的次年确立该方案,则认为其处于过渡阶段。
在全国范围内,中风住院人数在研究期间保持稳定:2000年为58.3万例,2010年为57.3万例。2000年至2003年期间,参与NIS的州或县中没有采用EMS护理系统的。从2004年到2010年,美国在已建立EMS急性中风护理区域系统的辖区内发生的中风住院比例稳步上升(1%、13%、28%、30%、30%、34%、49%)。2010年,278538例中风住院病例(占美国所有中风住院病例的49%)发生在已建立EMS转运的地区,另有18979例(3%)患者在正过渡到EMS转运的地区。
2010年,美国大多数中风患者在已建立或正过渡到有组织的中风护理系统的州住院治疗。这一覆盖美国一半人口的里程碑式进展是系统性中风护理的一项重大进步,并强调需要采用新方法,将中风中心护理进一步推广到所有患者。