Reducing time-to-unit among patients referred to an outpatient stroke assessment unit with a novel triage process: a prospective cohort study

Abstract Background To evaluate the performance of a novel triage system for Transient Ischemic Attack (TIA) units built upon an existent clinical prediction rule (CPR) to reduce time to unit arrival, relative to the time of symptom onset, for true TIA and minor stroke patients. Differentiating betw...

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Main Authors: Maximilian B. Bibok, Kristine Votova, Robert F. Balshaw, Mary L. Lesperance, Nicole S. Croteau, Anurag Trivedi, Jaclyn Morrison, Colin Sedgwick, Andrew M. Penn
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2018-02-01
Series:BMC Health Services Research
Subjects:
TIA
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12913-018-2952-x
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spelling doaj-cf1da88a46fa4ac99a280aa406a8b70b2020-11-24T21:42:20ZengBMCBMC Health Services Research1472-69632018-02-011811910.1186/s12913-018-2952-xReducing time-to-unit among patients referred to an outpatient stroke assessment unit with a novel triage process: a prospective cohort studyMaximilian B. Bibok0Kristine Votova1Robert F. Balshaw2Mary L. Lesperance3Nicole S. Croteau4Anurag Trivedi5Jaclyn Morrison6Colin Sedgwick7Andrew M. Penn8Department of Research & Capacity Building, Island HealthDepartment of Research & Capacity Building, Island HealthBritish Columbia Centre for Disease ControlDepartment of Mathematics and Statistics, University of VictoriaDepartment of Research & Capacity Building, Island HealthDepartment of Internal Medicine, Section of Neurology, University of ManitobaDepartment of Quality, Safety and Improvement, Island HealthDivision of Medical Sciences & Island Medical Program, University of VictoriaDepartment of Neurosciences, Stroke Rapid Assessment Unit (SRAU), Island HealthAbstract Background To evaluate the performance of a novel triage system for Transient Ischemic Attack (TIA) units built upon an existent clinical prediction rule (CPR) to reduce time to unit arrival, relative to the time of symptom onset, for true TIA and minor stroke patients. Differentiating between true and false TIA/minor stroke cases (mimics) is necessary for effective triage as medical intervention for true TIA/minor stroke is time-sensitive and TIA unit spots are a finite resource. Methods Prospective cohort study design utilizing patient referral data and TIA unit arrival times from a regional fast-track TIA unit on Vancouver Island, Canada, accepting referrals from emergency departments (ED) and general practice (GP). Historical referral cohort (N = 2942) from May 2013–Oct 2014 was triaged using the ABCD2 score; prospective referral cohort (N = 2929) from Nov 2014–Apr 2016 was triaged using the novel system. A retrospective survival curve analysis, censored at 28 days to unit arrival, was used to compare days to unit arrival from event date between cohort patients matched by low (0–3), moderate (4–5) and high (6–7) ABCD2 scores. Results Survival curve analysis indicated that using the novel triage system, prospectively referred TIA/minor stroke patients with low and moderate ABCD2 scores arrived at the unit 2 and 1 day earlier than matched historical patients, respectively. Conclusions The novel triage process is associated with a reduction in time to unit arrival from symptom onset for referred true TIA/minor stroke patients with low and moderate ABCD2 scores.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12913-018-2952-xTransient ischemic attackTIAAcute cerebrovascular syndromeACVSTIA unit triageClinical prediction rule
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Maximilian B. Bibok
Kristine Votova
Robert F. Balshaw
Mary L. Lesperance
Nicole S. Croteau
Anurag Trivedi
Jaclyn Morrison
Colin Sedgwick
Andrew M. Penn
spellingShingle Maximilian B. Bibok
Kristine Votova
Robert F. Balshaw
Mary L. Lesperance
Nicole S. Croteau
Anurag Trivedi
Jaclyn Morrison
Colin Sedgwick
Andrew M. Penn
Reducing time-to-unit among patients referred to an outpatient stroke assessment unit with a novel triage process: a prospective cohort study
BMC Health Services Research
Transient ischemic attack
TIA
Acute cerebrovascular syndrome
ACVS
TIA unit triage
Clinical prediction rule
author_facet Maximilian B. Bibok
Kristine Votova
Robert F. Balshaw
Mary L. Lesperance
Nicole S. Croteau
Anurag Trivedi
Jaclyn Morrison
Colin Sedgwick
Andrew M. Penn
author_sort Maximilian B. Bibok
title Reducing time-to-unit among patients referred to an outpatient stroke assessment unit with a novel triage process: a prospective cohort study
title_short Reducing time-to-unit among patients referred to an outpatient stroke assessment unit with a novel triage process: a prospective cohort study
title_full Reducing time-to-unit among patients referred to an outpatient stroke assessment unit with a novel triage process: a prospective cohort study
title_fullStr Reducing time-to-unit among patients referred to an outpatient stroke assessment unit with a novel triage process: a prospective cohort study
title_full_unstemmed Reducing time-to-unit among patients referred to an outpatient stroke assessment unit with a novel triage process: a prospective cohort study
title_sort reducing time-to-unit among patients referred to an outpatient stroke assessment unit with a novel triage process: a prospective cohort study
publisher BMC
series BMC Health Services Research
issn 1472-6963
publishDate 2018-02-01
description Abstract Background To evaluate the performance of a novel triage system for Transient Ischemic Attack (TIA) units built upon an existent clinical prediction rule (CPR) to reduce time to unit arrival, relative to the time of symptom onset, for true TIA and minor stroke patients. Differentiating between true and false TIA/minor stroke cases (mimics) is necessary for effective triage as medical intervention for true TIA/minor stroke is time-sensitive and TIA unit spots are a finite resource. Methods Prospective cohort study design utilizing patient referral data and TIA unit arrival times from a regional fast-track TIA unit on Vancouver Island, Canada, accepting referrals from emergency departments (ED) and general practice (GP). Historical referral cohort (N = 2942) from May 2013–Oct 2014 was triaged using the ABCD2 score; prospective referral cohort (N = 2929) from Nov 2014–Apr 2016 was triaged using the novel system. A retrospective survival curve analysis, censored at 28 days to unit arrival, was used to compare days to unit arrival from event date between cohort patients matched by low (0–3), moderate (4–5) and high (6–7) ABCD2 scores. Results Survival curve analysis indicated that using the novel triage system, prospectively referred TIA/minor stroke patients with low and moderate ABCD2 scores arrived at the unit 2 and 1 day earlier than matched historical patients, respectively. Conclusions The novel triage process is associated with a reduction in time to unit arrival from symptom onset for referred true TIA/minor stroke patients with low and moderate ABCD2 scores.
topic Transient ischemic attack
TIA
Acute cerebrovascular syndrome
ACVS
TIA unit triage
Clinical prediction rule
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12913-018-2952-x
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