| Literature DB >> 28646851 |
Caterina Caminiti1, Peter Schulz2, Barbara Marcomini3, Elisa Iezzi3, Silvia Riva4, Umberto Scoditti5, Andrea Zini6, Giovanni Malferrari7, Maria Luisa Zedde7, Donata Guidetti8, Enrico Montanari9, Mario Baratti10, Licia Denti11.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Systematic reviews call for well-designed trials with clearly described intervention components to support the effectiveness of educational campaigns to reduce patient delay in stroke presentation. We herein describe the systematic development process of a campaign aimed to increase stroke awareness and preparedness.Entities:
Keywords: Cartoon; Intervention mapping; Media; Pre-hospital delay; Public campaign; Stroke
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28646851 PMCID: PMC5483310 DOI: 10.1186/s12873-017-0130-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Emerg Med ISSN: 1471-227X
Demographic characteristics of respondents compared with those of the general population
| Sample | Populationsa | |
|---|---|---|
| Demographic characteristics | ( | ( |
| Area | ||
| urban | 70 (34% ) | 1.500.935 (39%) |
| rural | 105 (52%) | 1.770.333 (46%) |
| mountain | 27 (14%) | 577.283 (15%) |
| Gender |
| |
| Male | 91 (45%) | 1.853.259 (48%) |
| Female | 110 (55%) | 1.995.291 (52%) |
| Age | ||
| 20-39 | 56 (28%) | 1.011.386 (28%) |
| 40-64 | 97 (48%) | 1.588.385 (44%) |
| >65 | 49 (24%) | 1.007.452 (28%) |
| Education |
| |
| Primary school (1-5 years) or no education | 31 (16%) | 781.033 (20%) |
| Secondary school (6-8 years) | 43 (22%) | 1.128.140 (29%) |
| High school (9-13 years) | 95 (48%) | 1.421.088 (37%) |
| University or graduate education | 28 (14%) | 518.289 (14%) |
aSource: Emilia-Romagna Resident (Year 2013 - dati.istat.it)
Answers to items containing stroke symptoms (N = 21 items*202 participants)
| Selecting | % answer ( |
|---|---|
| Call “118” immediately | 1880 (44%) |
| Call doctor's office immediately | 1102 (26%) |
| wait 1 hour and then decide | 945 (22%) |
| wait 1 day and then decide | 283 (7%) |
| missing | 32 (1%) |
Sociodemographic characteristics of subjects who would call “118” for more than 10 stroke symptoms (>50% of 21) compared with those of the remaining respondents
| >50%items (%) | ≤50%items (%) | Prevalence Ratio | CI (95%) | Pr > Chisq | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Gender | |||||
| Male | 35(43%) | 56 (47%) | 1 | ||
| Female | 47 (57%) | 63 (53%) | 0,93 | 0.74-1.17 | 0,539 |
| Age Class | |||||
| 20-39 | 15 (18%) | 41 (34%) | 1 | ||
| 40-64 | 45 (55%) | 52 (43%) | 0,73 | 0.56-0.93 | 0,011 |
| > = 65 | 22 (27%) | 27 (23%) | 0,75 | 0.56-1.01 | 0,062 |
| Education | |||||
| Primary school (1-5 years) or no education | 14 (18%) | 17 (14%) | 1 | ||
| Secondary school (6-8 years) | 22 (28%) | 21 (18%) | 0,90 | 0.58-1.38 | 0,631 |
| High school (9-13 years) | 36 (45%) | 59(50%) | 1,14 | 0.81-1.61 | 0,441 |
| University and over | 8 (10%) | 21 (18%) | 0,90 | 0.90-1.93 | 0,161 |
| Area | |||||
| Urban | 22 (27%) | 48 (40%) | 1,25 | 1.00-1.56 | 0,052 |
| Rural | 50 (61%) | 55 (46%) | 0,79 | 0.65-0.99 | 0,041 |
| Mountain | 10 (12%) | 17 (14%) | 1,07 | 0.78-1.47 | 0,657 |
Fig. 1Responses to STAT. STAT scenarios ordered by percentage of correct responses
Fig. 2Information sources. Local sources and channels of health information most commonly used by respondents
Fig. 3Flow diagram
Mode of arrival at hospital: comparison between those who arrive promptly and late
| ≤2 hours | >2 hours | Total | Prevalence Ratio | CI 95% | Pr > Chisq | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ambulance/ “118” | 142 (81%) | 103 (47%) | 245 (62%) | 0.54 | 0.46-0.64 | <0.001 |
| Personal/ Relative’s/Friend’s car | 32 (18%) | 105 (48%) | 137 (35%) | 1.74 | 1.47-2.05 | <0.001 |
| Other | 1 (1%) | 10 (5%) | 11 (3%) | 0.90 | 0.22-3.61 | 0.883 |
Patient sociodemographic and medical characteristics according to time of arrival at hospital
| ≤2 hours | >2 hours | Total | Prevalence Ratio | CI 95% | Pr > Chisq | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age | ||||||
| ≥65 years | 133 (76%) | 155 (71%) | 288 (73%) | 0.90 | 0.74-1.08 | 0.260 |
| Median (IQR) | 76 (66-84) | 74 (64-83) | 75 (65-83) | |||
| Gender | ||||||
| Female | 86 (49%) | 113 (52%) | 199 (51%) | 1.05 | 0.88-1.25 | 0.596 |
| Education | ||||||
| Primary school (1-5 years) or no education | 99 (58%) | 116 (53%) | 215 (55%) | 1 | ||
| Secondary school (6-8 years) | 40 (23%) | 54 (25%) | 94 (24%) | 1.08 | 0.87-1.34 | 0.483 |
| High school (9-13 years) | 24 (14%) | 35 (16%) | 59 (15%) | 1.11 | 0.87-1.42 | 0.385 |
| University or graduate education | 9 (5%) | 13 (6%) | 22 (6%) | 1.11 | 0.76-1.61 | 0.578 |
| Lives alone | ||||||
| Yes | 30 (17%) | 60 (28%) | 90 (23%) | 1.28 | 1.07-1.53 | 0.008 |
| Risk factors | ||||||
| Prior TIA | 25 (14%) | 29 (13%) | 54 (14%) | 0.96 | 0.74-1.26 | 0.782 |
| Hypertension | 135 (77%) | 147 (67%) | 282 (72%) | 0.82 | 0.68-0.97 | 0.025 |
| Diabetes | 29 (17%) | 42 (19%) | 71 (18%) | 1.08 | 0.87-1.35 | 0.476 |
| Smoker | 31 (18%) | 41 (19%) | 72 (18%) | 1.03 | 0.83-1.29 | 0.778 |
| Hyperlipidemia | 48 (27%) | 56 (26%) | 104 (26%) | 0.96 | 0.78-1.18 | 0.701 |
| Atrial fibrillation | 40 (23%) | 42 (19%) | 82 (21%) | 0.91 | 0.72-1.14 | 0.401 |
| Carotid artery disease | 21 (12%) | 21 (10%) | 42 (11%) | 0.89 | 0.65-1.22 | 0.474 |
| Ischemic heart disease | 27 (15%) | 38 (17%) | 65 (17%) | 0.90 | 0.45-1.81 | 0.767 |
| Peripheral vascular disease | 4 (2%) | 4 (2%) | 8 (2%) | 1.07 | 0.85-1.34 | 0.585 |
| None | 12 (7%) | 25 (11%) | 37 (9%) | 1.25 | 0.98-1.59 | 0.076 |
| Diagnosis | ||||||
| Transient ischemic attack (TIA) | 24 (14%) | 34 (16%) | 58 (15%) | 1.07 | 0.84-1.35 | 0.590 |
| Hemorrhagic stroke | 20 (11%) | 19 (9%) | 39 (10%) | 0.87 | 0.62-1.21 | 0.402 |
| Ischemic stroke: | 123 (70%) | 149 (68%) | 272 (69%) | 0.96 | 0.80-1.16 | 0.676 |
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| Other | 8 (5%) | 16 (7%) | 24 (6%) | 1.22 | 0.90-1.64 | 0.194 |
Fig. 4Patient-reported barriers. Frequencies of barriers reported by patients who arrived at hospital after 3 hours, subdivided into patients who did and did not use EMS
Actions taken at the time of symptom onset by patients (or their caregivers) who arrive early at the hospital (≤2 hours of symptom onset) vs those who arrive later
| When you developed the symptoms that brought you to the hospital, what did you FIRST think was wrong? | ≤2 hours | >2 hours | Total | Prevalence Ratio | CI 95% | Pr > Chisq |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Stroke/TIA | 47 (27%) | 42 (19%) | 89 (23%) | 0.82 | 0.64-1.04 | 0.094 |
| Other | 46 (26%) | 86 (39%) | 132 (34%) | 1.23 | 1.08-1.53 | 0.004 |
| I have not thought about anything | 82 (47%) | 90 (41%) | 172 (44%) | 0.90 | 075-1.08 | 0.273 |
| Whom did you first call or speak with after your symptoms started? | ||||||
| “118” | 35 (20%) | 9 (4%) | 44 (11%) | 0.34 | 0.19-0.62 | <0.001 |
| General Practice (GP) | 11 (6%) | 62 (28%) | 73 (19%) | 1.74 | 1.50-2.02 | <0.001 |
| Relative/Friend | 115 (66%) | 134 (61%) | 249 (63%) | 0.92 | 0.77-1.10 | 0.379 |
| Other | 14 (8%) | 13 (6%) | 27 (7%) | 0.86 | 0.57-1.28 | 0.461 |
| What was the reaction of the person you first called or spoke with after your symptoms started? | ||||||
| Encouraged me to call “118” | 74 (42%) | 45 (21%) | 126 (32%) | 0.57 | 0.44-0.73 | <0.001 |
| Encouraged me to call my GP | 3 (2%) | 25 (11%) | 28 (7%) | 1.69 | 1.44-1.98 | <0.001 |
| Encouraged me to go to the hospital | 8 (5%) | 54 (25%) | 63 (16%) | 1.72 | 1.49-2.00 | <0.001 |
| Drove me to the hospital | 19 (11%) | 24 (11%) | 43 (11%) | 1.01 | 0.76-1.34 | 0.961 |
| Recommended that I wait to see if my symptoms improved | 2 (1%) | 11 (5%) | 13 (13%) | 1.55 | 1.21-1.99 | 0.001 |
| Other | 69 (39%) | 59 (27%) | 88 (22%) | 0.82 | 0.67-1.02 | 0.072 |
Log-Binomial Model
| Prevalence Ratio | CI 95% | Pr > Chisq | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Lives alone (Yes = 1) | 1.06 | 0.95-1.17 | 0.263 |
| Risk factor Hypertension (Yes = 1) | 0.96 | 0.88-1.05 | 0.387 |
| Diagnosis Ischemic Score LACI (lacunar Stroke) (Yes = 1) | 1.06 | 0.96-1.17 | 0.238 |
| I first think (Other = 1) | 1.03 | 0.96-1.12 | 0.401 |
| I first call or speak ( GP = 1) | 1.15 | 1.03-1.27 | 0.009 |
| The reaction of the person I first called (Encouraged me to call “118” = 0) | 1.12 | 1.03-1.23 | 0.013 |
Matrix of program objectives according to Intervention Mapping recommendations
| Performance objectives | Modifiable determinants | Behavioral outcomes | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Knowledge | Self-efficacy | Outcome expectation | ||
| Recognizing symptoms as related to stroke | Being able to recognize the most frequent stroke symptoms | Feeling confident about recognizing the symptoms | Prompt reaction to stroke as un urgency by the patient or any witness of stroke onset (perception, interpretation and appraisal) | |
| Realizing symptoms seriousness | Knowing that stroke is a serious disease | Seeking immediately medical professional care (decision making) | ||
| Being aware that timely arrival will give access to treatments that can lead to complete recovery | Knowing the treatment opportunity for stroke, notably thrombolysis | Trusting in the possibility of complete recovery with specific treatments | Referring immediately to the hospital (decision making) | |
| Calling EMS immediately | Knowing that the first thing to do is to call EMS | Feeling confident about being able to do the right thing by oneself | Trusting in EMS as a mean to arrive timely to the hospital | Use EMS (ambulance) to go to the Hospital (decision making) |