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Abstract 91: Nurses Activate Inpatient Stroke Alerts Faster than Physicians and are Equally Competent at Identifying Stroke Patients versus Stroke Mimics
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Introduction:
In-hospital “stroke alerts” are typically activated when a patient’s neurological status acutely deteriorates. Acute inpatient strokes represent an excellent potential opportunity for definitive treatment, but over triaging causing false alarms was a challenge at our institution, especially in the cardiology/CT surgery units, where many stroke mimic patients were being seen. Our stroke nurse, stroke coordinator, and stroke team physicians designed and implemented a formal collaborative educational initiative to improve quality and timeliness of stroke pager calls.
Hypothesis:
Non- neurological nurses educated to recognize stroke signs and symptoms who activate the stroke team will identify at least as great a proportion of true stroke patients as physicians.
Methods:
We retrospectively analyzed prospectively collected inpatient stroke team calls on 93 inpatients over one year’s time. The person (physician versus nurse) calling the stroke alert was identified via shared electronic medical record review. We compared the proportion of patients (via chi-square analysis) who after formal chart review had a true diagnosis of stroke (versus mimic). Neurological floor and neuro-ICU patients were excluded.
Results:
Nurses initiated 59/93 stroke team calls (63%) during the study period. Overall, 59% (37/59) of nurse- activated calls were for patients whom ultimately were determined to have had a true stroke as compared to 63% of physician-activated calls (20/34); p=0.71; 60% of stroke alerts came from the cardiology/CT surgery nursing units, and the accuracy of nurses on these units was 67% as compared to 53% for other non- neurological nursing units. (p=.323). Nurses activated the stroke team faster (median 2 hours [25
th
, 75
th
%ile 0.5hr, 6 hrs]) than physicians (median 4.9hrs [25
th
, 75
th
%ile 1.3, 21.3 hrs]), p=.0096 {Wilcoxon Rank Sum}.
Conclusions:
Non- neurological nurses educated on stroke recognition and stroke team activation are as accurate at identifying inpatient acute stroke patients as physicians, and do so more than twice as fast on average as physicians. Intensive, focused, collaborative education of nursing staff in high-risk for inpatient stroke units, who typically more frequently assess patients than physicians, may via rapid and accurate identification improve inpatient stroke outcomes.
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)
Title: Abstract 91: Nurses Activate Inpatient Stroke Alerts Faster than Physicians and are Equally Competent at Identifying Stroke Patients versus Stroke Mimics
Description:
Introduction:
In-hospital “stroke alerts” are typically activated when a patient’s neurological status acutely deteriorates.
Acute inpatient strokes represent an excellent potential opportunity for definitive treatment, but over triaging causing false alarms was a challenge at our institution, especially in the cardiology/CT surgery units, where many stroke mimic patients were being seen.
Our stroke nurse, stroke coordinator, and stroke team physicians designed and implemented a formal collaborative educational initiative to improve quality and timeliness of stroke pager calls.
Hypothesis:
Non- neurological nurses educated to recognize stroke signs and symptoms who activate the stroke team will identify at least as great a proportion of true stroke patients as physicians.
Methods:
We retrospectively analyzed prospectively collected inpatient stroke team calls on 93 inpatients over one year’s time.
The person (physician versus nurse) calling the stroke alert was identified via shared electronic medical record review.
We compared the proportion of patients (via chi-square analysis) who after formal chart review had a true diagnosis of stroke (versus mimic).
Neurological floor and neuro-ICU patients were excluded.
Results:
Nurses initiated 59/93 stroke team calls (63%) during the study period.
Overall, 59% (37/59) of nurse- activated calls were for patients whom ultimately were determined to have had a true stroke as compared to 63% of physician-activated calls (20/34); p=0.
71; 60% of stroke alerts came from the cardiology/CT surgery nursing units, and the accuracy of nurses on these units was 67% as compared to 53% for other non- neurological nursing units.
(p=.
323).
Nurses activated the stroke team faster (median 2 hours [25
th
, 75
th
%ile 0.
5hr, 6 hrs]) than physicians (median 4.
9hrs [25
th
, 75
th
%ile 1.
3, 21.
3 hrs]), p=.
0096 {Wilcoxon Rank Sum}.
Conclusions:
Non- neurological nurses educated on stroke recognition and stroke team activation are as accurate at identifying inpatient acute stroke patients as physicians, and do so more than twice as fast on average as physicians.
Intensive, focused, collaborative education of nursing staff in high-risk for inpatient stroke units, who typically more frequently assess patients than physicians, may via rapid and accurate identification improve inpatient stroke outcomes.
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