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Comparative Study
. 2010 Jul;41(7):1495-500.
doi: 10.1161/STROKEAHA.110.582239. Epub 2010 Jun 3.

Quality monitoring of acute stroke care in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany, 2001-2006

Affiliations
Comparative Study

Quality monitoring of acute stroke care in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany, 2001-2006

Armin J Grau et al. Stroke. 2010 Jul.

Abstract

Background and purpose: Quality monitoring projects are useful tools to improve the quality and to assess temporal trends of stroke care in larger populations.

Methods: In Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany, a statewide, hospital-based, acute stroke care quality monitoring project was started in 2001. Initially, participation was mandatory for all hospitals with dedicated stroke units and from 2006 onward was mandatory for all hospitals. Quality monitoring included a structured data assessment and quality indicators for procedural measures.

Results: Between 2001 and 2006, the numbers of patients registered annually (N=6389 vs N=10 610), admission <3 hours after stroke onset (28.2% vs 34.6%), admission via emergency medical systems (38.1% vs 50.3%), and treatment in stroke units (44.3% vs 59.5%) increased significantly (P<0.0001, respectively). In ischemic stroke, use of thrombolytic therapy increased (for patients admitted <3 hours after onset, 6.5% vs 14.1%), whereas therapy with high-dose heparin declined (24.5% vs 6.0%, P<0.0001). Several quality indicators (performance of neuroimaging and Doppler/duplex sonography, neuroimaging <3 hours after admission) showed stable results at a high level; more patients received echocardiography (62.2% vs 74.0%), but fewer patients were rapidly examined by extracranial Doppler/duplex sonography (68.7% vs 62.8%, P<0.0001). Diagnosis and treatment of hypertension and hyperlipidemia, use of aspirin and combined aspirin/dipyridamole, and diagnosis of atrial fibrillation increased (P<0.0001, respectively). Use of oral anticoagulation remained stable at approximately 38% of patients with cardioembolism.

Conclusions: Although these results reflect high standards of acute stroke care and improvements regarding early admission, thrombolytic therapy, and several secondary preventive measures, there is still the potential for further improvement regarding thrombolysis, use of oral anticoagulation and statins, and admission to stroke units, for example.

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