| Literature DB >> 25601232 |
Rajendra Singh1, Lars Mathiassen, Jeffrey A Switzer, Robert J Adams.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Stroke is a leading cause of death and serious, long-term disability across the world. Urgent stroke care treatment is time-sensitive and requires a stroke-trained neurologist for clinical diagnosis. Rural areas, where neurologists and stroke specialists are lacking, have a high incidence of stroke-related death and disability. By virtually connecting emergency department physicians in rural hospitals to regional medical centers for consultations, specialized Web-based stroke evaluation systems (telestroke) have helped address the challenge of urgent stroke care in underserved communities. However, many rural hospitals that have deployed telestroke have not fully assimilated this technology.Entities:
Keywords: case study; information technology assimilation; stroke; telemedicine; telestroke
Year: 2014 PMID: 25601232 PMCID: PMC4288061 DOI: 10.2196/medinform.3028
Source DB: PubMed Journal: JMIR Med Inform
Figure 1REACH Web interface showing a patient's CT scan.
Primary and secondary data sources.
| Primary data sources | Secondary data sources |
| 15 semistructured interviews at 2 hubs (with neurologists, stroke coordinators, ED nurse managers, stroke service line manager, and data analyst) | 14 published papers [ |
| 30 semistructured interviews at 8 spokes (with chief executive officers and chief operations officers, stroke coordinators, neurologists, ED directors, ED physicians, ED nurses, quality managers, radiology nurses, and EMS directors) | 15 internal documents related to 8 spokes (including presentations, stroke protocols, emails, and meeting notes) |
| 5 semistructured interviews at REACH Health Inc (with chief executive officer, chief technology officer, marketing director, business manager, and IT specialist) | 5 internal documents (including presentations, technical specifications, and meeting notes) |
Network characteristics and REACH assimilation data.
| Telestroke network | Spoke hospital | Joining date | No. of | Primary stroke center | Stroke coordinator | Local neurologist | REACH assimilationa |
| GRU | 1 | 2/1/03 | 72 | No | No | No | 18.70 |
| GRU | 2 | 3/1/03 | 47 | No | No | No | 15.31 |
| GRU | 3 | 7/1/03 | 50 | No | No | No | 26.24 |
| GRU | 4 | 8/1/03 | 10 | No | No | No | 18.12 |
| GRUb | 5 | 9/1/03 | 56 | No | No | No | 21.33 |
| GRU | 6 | 3/1/04 | 65 | No | No | No | 16.44 |
| GRU | 7 | 4/1/04 | 20 | No | No | No | 9.01 |
| GRUb | 8 | 2/1/05 | 52 | No | No | No | 17.71 |
| GRU | 9 | 3/1/06 | 71 | No | No | No | 13.72 |
| GRU | 10 | 1/1/08 | 191 | No | No | Yes | 7.93 |
| GRU | 11 | 8/1/08 | 236 | Yes | No | Yes | 7.35 |
| GRU | 12 | 6/1/09 | 40 | No | No | No | 19.51 |
| GRU | 13 | 10/1/09 | 190 | Yes | Yes | Yes | 21.42 |
| GRUb | 14 | 10/1/09 | 196 | Yes | Yes | Yes | 22.65 |
| GRU | 15 | 1/1/10 | 180 | Yes | Yes | Yes | 47.40 |
| GRU | 16 | 3/1/10 | 163 | No | No | Yes | 8.39 |
| GRUb | 17 | 11/1/10 | 192 | No | Yes | Yes | 14.88 |
| MUSC | 1 | 5/1/08 | 131 | No | No | Yes | 20.81 |
| MUSC | 2 | 5/6/08 | 140 | No | No | Yes | 30.66 |
| MUSCb | 3 | 5/7/08 | 453 | No | Yes | Yes | 14.77 |
| MUSC | 4 | 9/1/08 | 220 | No | No | No | 4.47 |
| MUSC | 5 | 9/18/08 | 124 | No | No | No | 15.89 |
| MUSC | 6 | 12/23/08 | 25 | No | Yes | No | 35.10 |
| MUSCb | 7 | 1/20/10 | 45 | Yes | Yes | Yes | 41.62 |
| MUSCb | 8 | 3/26/10 | 288 | Yes | Yes | Yes | 26.84 |
| MUSCb | 9 | 5/19/10 | 121 | No | Yes | Yes | 32.93 |
| MUSC | 10 | 7/29/10 | 79 | No | No | No | 28.80 |
| MUSC | 11 | 8/26/10 | 231 | No | No | No | 21.69 |
| MUSC | 12 | 01/21/11 | 116 | No | No | Yes | 12.64 |
| MUSC | 13 | 2/28/11 | 105 | No | No | Yes | 30.30 |
| MUSC | 14 | 2/28/11 | 50 | No | No | Yes | 21.00 |
| MUSC | 15 | 3/2/11 | 354 | No | Yes | Yes | 27.30 |
aREACH assimilation calculated as number of telestroke consultations/year per 104 ED volume.
bSpokes selected for detailed examination (through field visits).
Figure 2Variation in telestroke assimilation across networks.
Comparison of hub-level practices.
| GRU-REACH hub | MUSC-REACH hub |
| GRU-REACH hub invited most of the early spokes to become part of the network and subsidized their participation; most recent spokes sought membership without subsidies. | MUSC-REACH hub invited most of the early spokes to become part of the network, but participation was not subsidized; most recent spokes also sought membership without subsidies. |
| GRU administration considers telestroke as an ongoing experiment rooted in the vision and goodwill of the stroke specialists who developed REACH. As such, the specialists feel REACH is “taken for granted.” GRU administration does not provide support for telestroke operations. | MUSC administration considers telestroke an integral part of their neuroscience service line, and therefore provides ongoing support (including director’s pay, advertising budget, and administrative salary support for credentialing, billing, operations, and project management). |
| There is broad consensus among the hub stroke specialists that network performance would benefit from a full-time telestroke coordinator. | A dedicated telestroke coordinator at the hub has been part of the network from the start. She facilitates coordination and training of the spokes’ ED staff. |
| The hub has no established processes for reinforcing telestroke use and related routines at the spokes. There are no continuous quality improvement processes in place. Any problems related to stroke consultations are reported to REACH Health Inc with variable follow-up. | The hub has established processes for reinforcing telestroke use and related routines at the spokes. It has a formal continuous quality improvement process in place. Any problem during telestroke consultation is reported to REACH Health Inc and its resolution is coordinated by the hub staff. |
| The hub collects spokes’ telestroke use data, but there is no systematic analysis of the data. | The hub telestroke coordinator collects spokes’ usage data and conducts systematic analysis. |
| A hub stroke specialist visits spokes when they go live with REACH and at rare occasions for major upgrades. However, there are no ongoing training and follow-up procedures. | A hub telestroke specialist visits spokes when they go live with REACH and maintains regular communication (with some visits) to spokes to understand concerns and train ED staff. |
| The hub stroke specialists rarely conduct ongoing training for spokes. | The hub facilitates occasional breakfast meetings, lunch-and-learn, mock-consults, and dinners with spoke ED physicians and nurses to discuss issues. |
| The hub has no formal system to provide site-specific feedback. | The hub provides site-specific performance data. As an MUSC-REACH stroke specialist told us, “The sites love to receive such feedback.” |
Impact of spoke characteristics on telestroke assimilation.
| Spoke characteristic | REACH assimilationa in GRU-REACH | REACH assimilation in MUSC-REACH | Overall REACH assimilation | |
|
|
|
|
| |
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| No local neurologist | 17.61 | 21.19 | 18.80 |
|
| Local neurologist | 18.57 | 25.89 | 22.88 |
|
| Difference (%) | 5.45 | 22.18 | 21.70 |
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|
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| |
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| No stroke certification | 15.95 | 22.80 | 19.37 |
|
| Stroke certification | 24.70 | 34.23 | 27.88 |
|
| Difference (%) | 54.86 | 50.13 | 43.93 |
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|
|
|
| |
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| No stroke coordinator | 15.37 | 20.69 | 17.55 |
|
| Stroke coordinator | 26.59 | 29.76 | 28.49 |
|
| Difference (%) | 73.00 | 43.84 | 62.34 |
aREACH assimilation calculated as number of telestroke consultations/year per 104 ED volume.
Figure 3Proposed model of telestroke assimilation.