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Randomized Controlled Trial
. 2008 Jan;37(1):32-8.
doi: 10.1093/ageing/afm133. Epub 2007 Nov 14.

Bridging the gap: the effectiveness of teaming a stroke coordinator with patient's personal physician on the outcome of stroke

Affiliations
Randomized Controlled Trial

Bridging the gap: the effectiveness of teaming a stroke coordinator with patient's personal physician on the outcome of stroke

Nancy E Mayo et al. Age Ageing. 2008 Jan.

Abstract

Objectives: to test the hypothesis as to whether persons newly discharged into the community following an acute stroke and assigned a stroke case manager would experience, compared to usual post-hospital care, better health-related quality of life (HRQL), fewer emergency room visits and less non-elective hospitalisations.

Design: a stratified, balanced, evaluator-blinded, randomised clinical trial.

Setting: five university-affiliated acute-care hospitals in Montreal, Quebec, Canada.

Participants: persons (n = 190) returning home directly from the acute-care hospital following a first or recurrent stroke with a need for health care supervision post-discharge because of low function, co-morbidity, or isolation.

Intervention: for 6 weeks following hospital discharge a nurse stroke care manager maintained contact with patients through home visits and telephone calls designed to coordinate care with the person's personal physician and link the stroke survivor into community-based stroke services.

Measurements: the primary outcome was the Physical Component Summary (PCS) of the Short-Form (SF)-36 survey. A secondary outcome was utilisation of health services. Also measured was the impact of stroke on functioning. Measurements were made at hospital discharge (baseline), following the 6-week intervention and at 6-months post-stroke.

Results: the average age of the participants was 70 years. Discharge was achieved on average 12 days post-stroke and most participants had had a stroke of moderate severity. There were no differences between groups on the primary outcome measure, health services utilisation, or any of the secondary outcome measures.

Conclusion: for this population, there was no evidence that this type of passive case management inferred any added benefit in terms of improvement in health-related quality of life or reduction in health services utilisation and stroke impact, than usual post-discharge management.

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