220 likes | 409 Views
Stroke Care in the UK. Tony Rudd. Organisation of Services. 120,000 new strokes per year Approx 200 hospitals treating acute stroke patients Most services providing combined acute and rehabilitation services Specialist rehabilitation services in community e.g. Early supported discharge
E N D
Stroke Care in the UK Tony Rudd
Organisation of Services • 120,000 new strokes per year • Approx 200 hospitals treating acute stroke patients • Most services providing combined acute and rehabilitation services • Specialist rehabilitation services in community e.g. Early supported discharge • General practitioners doing most of secondary prevention
Thrombolysis Provision Intercollegiate Stroke Working Party
Thrombolysis Thrombolysis Service National median: 14 National total: 3284 Intercollegiate Stroke Working Party
National Initiatives for Change NAO 2005 National Stroke Strategy 2007 NICE and ICWP Stroke Guidelines 2008 National Sentinel Audit 2008 StrokeImprovement Programme
Case for change Patients treated in a Stroke Unit % 90% Physiotherapist assessment within 72 hours of admission % 90% Emergency brain scan within 24 hours of stroke % 90% In 2004 the Sentinel Stroke Audit showed that stroke services in London were poor… 11
More strokes occurred in outer London but most providers were in inner London GAPS GAPS OVERLAPS GAPS The more intense the red the greater number of providers available to provide service to the area.
999 HASU SU Story so far The development of the strategy was subject to wide engagement with the model of care agreed by clinicians and user groups New acute model of care Community Rehabilitation Services Discharge from acute phase 30 min LAS journey* After 72 hours • Stroke Units • High quality inpatient rehabilitation • in local hospital • Multi-therapy rehabilitation • On-going medical supervision • On-site TIA assessment services • Length of stay variable • HASUs • Provide immediate response • Specialist assessment on arrival • CT and thrombolysis (if appropriate) • within 30 minutes • High dependency care and • stabilisation • Length of stay less than 72 hours *This was the gold standard maximum journey time agreed for any Londoner travelling by ambulance to a HASU
Prophets of doom predictions • It would not be possible to implement major system reorganisation in London for a condition as complex as stroke • Staffing requirements would not be achievable • Patients would not accept being taken to a hospital that is not local to them • It would not be possible to transport people within 30 minutes to a HASU • Repatriation would fail and HASUs would quickly become full • Trusts would fight to retain services • Even if acute services work it would fail because it would be impossible to change community services • The new model would be unsustainable
Following bidding and evaluation a preferred model was agreed and consulted on
London Stroke Care: How is it working? 1st February 8 Hyperacute (HASU) stroke units opened taking all patients who might be suitable for thrombolysis 19th July all stroke patients taken to one of the HASUs Over 400 additional nurses and 87 additional therapists recruited to work in stroke care in London by July 2010
The number of stroke patients taken by London Ambulance Service to a HASU has been increasing as implementation progresses
Performance data shows that London is performing better than all other SHAs in England Thrombolysis rates have increased since implementation began to a rate higher than that reported for any large city elsewhere in the world 12% 10% 3.5% Feb – Jul 2009 AIM Feb – Jul 2010 % of patients spending 90% of their time on a dedicated stroke unit % of TIA patients’ treatment initiated within 24 hours
Efficiency gains are also beginning to be seen Average length of stay HASU destination on discharge • The average length of stay has fallen from • approximately 15 days in 2009/10 to • approximately 11.5 days in 20010/11 YTD • This represents a potential saving of • approximately [DN - insert figure] • Approximately 35% of patients are discharged • home from a HASU. The estimate at the • beginning of the project was 20%.
London Stroke Care: How is it working? • No significant problems with repatriation to SUs. Good exchange of patient information. • Significantly improved quality of care in SUs • Evidence of constructive collaboration between hospitals • SU Consultants joining HASU rotas and participating in post-take rounds and educational meetings • Very positive anecdotal patient feedback
Areas where issues remain • Community services in many areas still insufficient • Early supported discharge • Longer term rehabilitation • Vocational rehabilitation • Collecting data to prove the model is worth it
The Future • Reorganisation of health care in UK with less central control • Abolition of strategic health authorities • General practitioners commissioning care • May mean that major changes to stroke care will be difficult • Probably funding cuts