ARCHIVED
May 2006

 

Dr. Smith is director
of the Stroke Program
at Swedish Medical
Center and The
Colorado Neurological Institute.

He is a Clinical
Professor of Neurology
at the University of
Colorado Health
Sciences Center,
and serves as
the medical advisor
for the Colorado
Stroke Registry.

   

What is the status of stroke centers?

Stroke care in the United States is changing rapidly…

This change has been propelled by the realization that while stroke remains common, costly, and tragic, it is now also preventable, treatable, and modifiable. There is no other neurological disorder for which we currently have such potential to make a positive impact. Yet we are not living up to our potential. Our knowledge of what we should be doing about stroke considerably exceeds the reality of what we actually are doing.

Our failure to do our best has led to an examination of the way in which stroke care is delivered. The conclusion is that the old system of stroke care is inadequate. It is too sluggish, too fragmented, and too inconsistent to treat stroke effectively. Stroke centers are seen as part of the solution for this problem.

The concept of stroke centers was first published in June of 2000(1). In this document, the components of a Primary Stroke Center were set down by the Brain Attack Coalition (BAC), a group representing many prestigious organizational stakeholders across the country. Key elements of a Primary Stroke Center were noted to include an integrated emergency response system, acute stroke teams, readily available brain imaging and laboratory tests, and stroke units.

In the BAC paper, the favorable experience of trauma centers was seen as an inspiration for stroke, which—like trauma—requires that a complex set of actions be rapidly performed by a diverse, but coordinated group of health care providers. In the case of stroke, these actions focus on the appropriate delivery of clot-busting medication to open up a blocked artery that is causing a stroke.

While acute treatment was the centerpiece of the BAC paper, the Primary Stroke Center was seen as more than an acute response system. Many simple but easy-to-overlook procedures favorably impact stroke care beyond the acute stage. To insure that these are not overlooked, written care protocols for stroke were called for, along with systematic monitoring of these procedures.

The BAC paper circulated widely for several years. Many hospitals looked at the list of recommendations and reckoned themselves to meet all of the specified criteria. Since no agency or organization was empowered to certify whether hospitals actually did meet the criteria, hospitals began calling themselves “stroke centers” via a questionable system of self-designation. One report indicated that although 77% believed that they met recommended criteria, only 7% actually did so(2).
It was not until 2004…
that Primary Stroke Center designation began to be provided by an independent organization. For a fee, paid by candidate hospitals, the Joint Commission on Accreditation of Healthcare Organizations (JCAHO) began inspecting and verifying that institutions met BAC criteria. JCAHO is the same organization responsible for evaluating and accrediting thousands of health care organizations and programs in the United States. With JCAHO's stamp of approval, the term “Stroke Center” began to have real meaning. “JCAHO certification” is now a widely sought designation. For most of the country, it has become the “gold standard” for stroke centers.

Demand for certification has swamped JCAHO’s ability to actually perform certification inspections. A few states (for example, Massachusetts) have elected to bypass JCAHO certification altogether by adopting an independent, state-level system of certification.

To make matters more complicated, there will soon be two levels of stroke centers–primary and comprehensive centers. A paper defining the elements of a Comprehensive Stoke Center (CSC) was published in 2005(3). The CSC will include all of the elements of a Primary Stroke Center. Additionally, it will offer advanced techniques for acute treatment of both ischemic and hemorrhagic strokes. To date, however, no organization or agency is certifying that hospitals meet the Comprehensive Stroke Center criteria.

In choosing a hospital for stroke care, one can be most confident when the hospital has JCAHO. Or state-equivalent stroke center designation. There is, however, no current way for potential patients to insure that they will be transported to the best hospital in the event of a stroke(4).

Given the state of flux regarding stroke center designation, emergency transport policies are understandably inconsistent. In most states, the hospital of choice is still the one nearest by. Factors such as contracts between hospitals and insurance carriers also influence where a patient is taken. Patient preference is given much weight by emergency transport providers, but there is no guarantee that patient preference will outweigh other considerations.

We in the “stroke community”…
recognize that stroke care can be improved by better use of the knowledge and tools that are currently at our disposal. Getting from where we are to where we ought to be is not so much a technological problem as it is a sociological one. Many states, including our own Colorado, are currently struggling with how best to develop and coordinate a system of stroke centers in order to optimize efficiency and excellence in stroke care(5).
This is no easy task. Stroke is a complex condition with many variations. Stroke care involves many health care providers across a range of disciplines. Competition for stroke “business” is keen among institutions, providers, professional associations, government agencies, and non profit organizations. Long established patterns of referral and outmoded ideas about stroke slow down innovation in the delivery of stroke care. Corralling these elements in a cooperating, efficient, and effective system is indeed a challenge.

Stroke care in the United States is changing rapidly…
it is changing for the better, but change itself can be disruptive and confusing, as the above comments may suggest. I hope that they at least serve to aid in understanding where things currently stand.
References:
1
Alberts, et al. Recommendations for the Establishment of Primary Stroke Centers. JAMA. 2000;283: 3102-3109
2 Kidwell, et al. Establishment of primary stroke centers: A survey of physician attitudes and hospital resources. Neurology 2003;60: 1452–1456
3.
Alberts, MD; et al. Recommendations for Comprehensive Stroke Centers. Stroke. 2005; 36: 1597-1618
4 Burton, TM. Stroke victims are often taken to wrong hospital. Wall Street Journal. Monday, May 09, 2005.

5

Schwamm, et al. Recommendations for the Establishment of Stroke Systems of Care. Stroke. 2005; 36: 0001-0014.

 


Return

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Return

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Return

 

ARCHIVES

What is a TIA?    November 2006
What is TPA?    September/October 2006
The Colorado Stroke Registry
   
 
August 2006
What is the latest in stroke treatment?
 
   July 2006
What should I/my family expect as a part of an evaluation in case of a stroke?  June 2006
What is the status of stroke centers?   May 2006

 

 

Brought to you through an unrestricted educational grant from



Since 1849, the Pfizer name has been synonymous with the trust and reliability inherent in the word Quality. Quality is ingrained in the work of their colleagues and all their Values. Pfizer is dedicated to the delivery of quality health care around the world. Their business practices and processes are designed to achieve quality results that exceed the expectations of patients, customers, colleagues, investors, business partners and regulators. Pfizer has a relentless passion for Quality in everything they do.
 


"where recovery continues"

HOME

© 2008. Rocky Mountain Stroke Association.