Stroke Research Group, Population Health Sciences Institute, Newcastle University, Newcastle upon Tyne, NE2 4HH, England.
North East Ambulance Service NHS Foundation Trust, Bernicia House, Goldcrest Way, Newburn Riverside, Newcastle upon Tyne, NE15 8NY, England.
BMC Emerg Med. 2022 Sep 3;22(1):153. doi: 10.1186/s12873-022-00713-6.
Emergency medical services (EMS) are the first point of contact for most acute stroke patients. EMS call to hospital times have increased in recent years for stroke patients in the UK which is undesirable due to the relationship between time and effectiveness of reperfusion treatment. This review aimed to identify and describe interventions devised to improve the efficiency of acute stroke care which reported an impact on ground-based EMS call to hospital times.
A systematic review of published literature identified from five databases (Medline, EMBASE, CINAHL, the Cochrane library and the Database of Research in Stroke (DORIS)) from January 2000 to December 2020 with narrative synthesis was conducted. Inclusion criteria were primary studies of ground-based EMS, focused on stroke and aiming to improve EMS times. Papers published before 2000, focussing on mobile stroke units or in languages other than English were excluded. Two reviewers independently screened prospective titles. Cochrane ROB2 and ROBINS-I tools were used to assess for risk of bias. This review was funded by a Stroke Association fellowship.
From 3767 initial records, 11 studies were included in the review. Included studies were categorised into three groups: studies targeting EMS dispatch and EMS clinicians (n = 4); studies targeting EMS clinicians only (n = 4); and studies targeting whole system change (n = 3). Suspected stroke patients were the primary population studied and most (n = 10) interventions involved clinician education. Only one study (9%) reported a significant decrease in call to hospital time in one subgroup whereas two studies (18%) reported a significant increase in call to hospital time and all other studies (73%) reported no significant change.
Based on the included studies, interventions intended to improve the efficiency of the acute stroke pathway rarely improved EMS call to hospital times. Included studies were heterogenous and rarely focussed on the review topic which limits the usability of the findings. Further research is needed to explore the trade-off between changes to EMS stroke care and call to hospital times and subsequent impacts on in-hospital care and patient outcomes.
对于大多数急性脑卒中患者来说,急救医疗服务(EMS)是第一接触点。近年来,英国脑卒中患者的 EMS 呼叫到医院的时间有所增加,这是不可取的,因为时间与再灌注治疗的效果之间存在关系。本综述旨在识别和描述旨在提高急性脑卒中护理效率的干预措施,并报告了对地面 EMS 呼叫到医院时间的影响。
对从 2000 年 1 月至 2020 年 12 月在五个数据库(Medline、EMBASE、CINAHL、Cochrane 图书馆和 DORIS)中发表的文献进行系统综述,采用叙述性综合法进行分析。纳入标准为针对脑卒中且旨在改善 EMS 时间的基础 EMS 的原始研究。排除 2000 年以前发表的、专注于移动脑卒中单元或非英语的研究。两位评审员独立筛选前瞻性标题。采用 Cochrane ROB2 和 ROBINS-I 工具评估偏倚风险。本综述由卒中协会奖学金资助。
从 3767 条初始记录中,有 11 项研究纳入了综述。纳入的研究分为三组:针对 EMS 调度和 EMS 临床医生的研究(n=4);仅针对 EMS 临床医生的研究(n=4);以及针对整个系统变化的研究(n=3)。疑似脑卒中患者是主要研究人群,大多数(n=10)干预措施涉及临床医生教育。只有一项研究(9%)报告了一个亚组的呼叫到医院时间显著减少,而两项研究(18%)报告了呼叫到医院时间显著增加,其余所有研究(73%)均报告无显著变化。
基于纳入的研究,旨在提高急性脑卒中通路效率的干预措施很少能改善 EMS 呼叫到医院的时间。纳入的研究具有异质性,且很少关注综述主题,这限制了研究结果的可用性。需要进一步研究来探索 EMS 脑卒中护理和呼叫到医院时间的变化之间的权衡以及对院内护理和患者结局的后续影响。