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Telestroke Models of collaboration of care

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64% of US hospitals did not reat a single medicare patient with tPA over a 2 years period ... 6 regional hospitals (inpatient, outpatient and ER services but ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Telestroke Models of collaboration of care


1
TelestrokeModels of collaboration of care
  • Salvador Cruz-Flores, MD
  • Saint Louis University

2
Objectives
  • To understand
  • Current state of stroke care
  • Rationale for telestroke
  • System models of remote presence

3
Current state of stroke care
  • 2nd leading cause of death worldwide and 3rd
    leading cause in US
  • Major contributor to adult disability 15-30
    permanently disabled
  • Economic burden 65.5 billion n US in 2008
  • 87 of stroke mortality occurs in low- and
    middle-income regions
  • access to care not readily available
  • Strikes all ages, genders, race and ethnic groups

4
Stroke readiness
5
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6
Current state of stroke care
  • Two thirds of stroke patients arrive by EMS
  • Limited EMS in rural areas
  • Reluctance to use tPA in absence of stroke
    expertise

7
Current state of stroke care
  • 4 neurologists/100,000 people
  • Fewer with stroke expertise
  • 385 interventional neuroradiologists in US in 238
    hospitals, 45 states
  • Litigation and liability
  • Greatest risk is from failure to document reasons
    for withholding therapy and not from injury
    related to therapy
  • lt5 (perhaps lt2) stroke patients receive tPA

8
Rural Hospitals
  • 5759 Hospitals in the US
  • 4919 community Hospitals
  • 2003 Rural Hospitals (AHA statistics 2006)
  • 1464 Community hospitals in a network
  • 2669 hospitals in a system

9
tPA usage
  • MEDPAR database
  • 64 of US hospitals did not reat a single
    medicare patient with tPA over a 2 years period
  • Kleindorfer D, Stroke 2009 presented at ISC

10
Why the limited usage
  • 40 od ER physicians reluctant to use tPA
  • In 2006-2007 only 32 fellows in approved vascular
    neurology fellowships in the US
  • Many neurologists are abandoning emergency room
    call

11
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12
Stroke Systems Models of Care
  • Stroke call with in person response to ER
  • Telephone drip and ship
  • Helicopter ship and drip
  • Telestroke
  • Telestroke with helicopter

13
Rationale for telestroke
  • Access to stroke consultation remotely
  • Reliability
  • Neurological exam compared to face to face exam
  • NIHSS
  • Teleradiology
  • Thrombolysis via telestroke appears safe
  • Decision making more accurate
  • Rate of tPA treated patients higher than rates in
    community hospitals

14
REACH
15
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16
Stroke systems of care
  • Regionalization
  • Levels of care
  • Comprehensive stroke center
  • Primary stroke center
  • Stroke center capability
  • Stroke unit
  • Evidence based stroke management
  • Collection of stroke quality measures
  • Clinical and educational collaborations between
    hubs and spoke facilities
  • QI
  • If no capability transfer agreements
  • Partial capability drip and ship

17
Stroke system models
18
Telestroke modelsRegionalization of care
  • Hub and Spoke Models
  • Frontier/Rural
  • Rural-Urban
  • Suburban-Urban
  • Urban Underserved

19
  • The Alaska Native Stroke Registry A
    Frontier/Rural Health Delivery Model

20
Alaska in Relation to the Lower 48 States
1
4
2
5
3
6
Population 663,661 Size 571,951 sq. miles
1Artic (polar bears/walrus) 2Western
3Southwestern (Aleutians) 4Interior
(Fairbanks) 5Southcentral (Anchorage)
6Southeastern (panhandle)
21
Hierarchy of Care in Alaska
  • Villages without health aids
  • Villages with health aids (n500 for 170 remote
    villages)
  • Village with subregional clinic (midlevel
    practitioners)
  • 6 regional hospitals (inpatient, outpatient and
    ER services but only 1 has a CT scan) and FPs
  • 1 referral/specialty hospital Alaska Native
    Medical Center, Anchorage, Alaska
  • An estimated 58 of individuals live in
    communities without regional hospitals (villages
    may contain lt200 persons)
  • Source Alaskan Natiave Tribal Health Consortium,
    2003
  • FP Family Practitioner

22
1
Hubs and Spokes 12 regions and 6 tribal hubs
Primary Linkage Telephone and Fax
23
Challenges of frontier/rural model
  • Slow feed into hubs.
  • Standard stroke care may never be given (e.g.,
    thombolytic therapy)
  • Air travel to the spokes and other remote areas
    is costly and time consuming
  • Access to specialty care may be limited and costly

24
Rural US Stroke Model
  • Critical Access Hospitals

25
REACH
26
Rural Areas May Lack Specialty Care Single hub
and spoke system and then upscale to multiple hub
and spoke systems
Courtesy of David Hess, MD REACH Telemedicine
System
27
Telestroke systems for neurological emergencies
  • Intracerebral hemorrhage
  • Traumatic brain injury
  • Post cardiac arrest
  • Spinal cord injury
  • Status epilepticus
  • Subarachnoid hemorrhage
  • Other disease states beyond neurology

28
Suburban urban model
Comprehensive stroke center
Primary stroke center
Primary stroke center
Primary stroke center
Community hospital
Community hospital
Community hospital
Community hospital
Community hospital
Community hospital
29
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30
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31
Thrombolysis by telephone
32
Thrombolysis by phone
  • OSF stroke network Peoria Il
  • St. Lukess Stroke Center KC
  • 53/142 tpa treated started in referring hospitals
  • University of Kentucky
  • Limited data on safety and efficacy

33
tPA plus
  • Bridging IV tPA IA tPA
  • Mechanical embolectomy
  • Sonotrhombolysis
  • Participation in clinical trials

34
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35
Potential models with telestroke
  • Ship and drip
  • Drip and ship
  • Drip and keep
  • Drip, ship and randomize
  • Drip, randomize and ship
  • Drip, randomize, and keep

36
Challenges to Medical OutsourcingTelemedicine
  • Information privacy (HIPAA regulations)
  • Infrastructure funding and operation costs
  • Regulatory and billing compliance
  • Malpractice and liability (uncharted territory
    regarding what constitutes telemedicine
    malpractice and standard of care)
  • Physician licensure/credentialing
  • Informed consent needed?
  • Measuring and ensuring quality of care
  • Source Singh SN, Wachter RM. NEJM 2008 358 15
    1622-27

37
Missouri
38
Summary
  • Stroke affects underserved areas
  • Telemedicine can breach that gap
  • Regionalization and time critical diagnosis
    nature favor Hub and Spoke model
  • Air transport may continue to be critical for
    frontier regions
  • Regulatory changes (with regards to stroke care)
    will probably force adoption of telestroke
    systems and early deployment of air transport
  • Video audio teleconferencing is the current
    recommended mode
  • Safety of teleconsultation via phone and
    teleradiology
  • Challenges are many but regulatory/liability,
    financial/funding and confidentiality remain as
    significant issues
  • Research on efficacy and safety is needed

39
  • Recommendations for implementation of
    telemedicine within stroke systems of care.
    Schwamm LH, Audelbert HJ, Amarenco P et al.
    Stroke 2009 (DOI10.116/StrokeAHA.109.192361
  • A review of the evidence for the use of
    telemedicine with stroke systems of care. Schwamm
    LH, Holloway RG, Amarenco P, et al. Stroke 2009.
    (DOI10.1161/StrokeAHA.109.192360)
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