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Treatment of acute ischemic stroke is highly time dependent, which relies heavily on each hospital’s ability and capacity. Designated stroke centers have been established across Canada, but there is still a divide between urban and rural hospitals. This study aims to understand the similarities and differences in their stroke treatment process workflow, incorporation of best practices and data collection.
Methods:
Interviews were conducted with clinicians in stroke centers across Canada to identify similarities and differences between provinces and hospital treatment capability. Semi-structured interviews were completed from September 15 to November 3, 2023, with clinicians and stroke coordinators using snowball and purposive sampling techniques. The interviews were analyzed using thematic analysis.
Results:
Fourteen participants were interviewed with representatives from four primary stroke centers and three comprehensive stroke centers across five provinces. Five primary themes were identified: 1) management of resources, 2) standardization of tasks, 3) data collection, 4) tool integration into workflow and 5) teamwork and experience. Participants in primary centers described limited resources to follow the patient through the entire treatment process, reliance on pre-notification times to prospectively search necessary patient information, using software to aid in calculating National Institute of Health Stroke Scale and being more cautious toward treating thrombolytics. Both center types discussed challenges with complete and accurate data collection.
Conclusions:
The overall stroke treatment process and information required across primary and comprehensive centers are similar. However, differences occur in the process due to limitations in resources, pre-arrival notification time, completeness and accuracy of data collected and comfort in treating with thrombolytics.
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