| Literature DB >> 29865148 |
Mohana Maddula1, Laura Adams2, Jonathan Donnelly3.
Abstract
Background: Transient Ischaemic Attacks (TIA) should be treated as a medical emergency. While high-risk TIAs have higher stroke risks than low-risk patients, there is an inherent limitation to this risk stratification, as some low-risk patients may have undiagnosed high-risk conditions. Inequity of care for TIA patients was observed, such that high-risk patients received urgent assessment through acute admission, while low-risk patients faced long waits for clinical consultation. A redesign of the TIA service was planned to offer timely assessment for all patients and avoid acute admission for high-risk patients.Entities:
Keywords: TIA; stroke; transient ischaemic attack
Year: 2018 PMID: 29865148 PMCID: PMC6023360 DOI: 10.3390/healthcare6020057
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Healthcare (Basel) ISSN: 2227-9032
Challenges faced by the service improvement project and how solutions were found.
| Challenges/Barriers to Change | Solutions |
|---|---|
| In-hospital processing of referrals was taking a few days as this was reliant on several administrative steps. | The referral process was streamlined; the stroke physician was accessible by phone during working hours and received email alerts of inpatient referrals and electronic General Practitioner referrals, enabling prompt triaging of referrals and early allocation of clinic slots. |
| Limited outpatient clinic space to see patients at short notice and review after same day investigations. | A single room on the stroke ward was converted into a consultation room. This enabled an easy oversight of clinic patients and a review after investigations. |
| Limited clinician time. No additional staff were provided. | The Stroke Physician and Registrar dropped one weekly outpatient clinic each and was this time redistributed to provide daily weekday TIA (Transient Ishcaemic Attack) clinics. |
| Limited Radiology resources. No additional funding to increase carotid or brain imaging appointments. | Referral pathway for carotid imaging was modified, such that only the stroke team could request carotid ultrasound in order to filter out inappropriate investigations (e.g., where imaging was unlikely to change overall management). This allowed for the allocation of two fixed carotid ultrasound appointments per day for TIA clinic patients. Same-day brain imaging was also available. |
| Need for urgent cardiac monitoring to identify patients with paroxysmal atrial fibrillation/flutter in place of inpatient telemetry. | The Stroke service purchased Holter monitor units to be used for the sole purpose of TIA clinic patients. Patients would have them fitted the same day and wear them for at least 48 h. These would get analysed urgently, and results were forwarded to Stroke physician. |
Audit cycle results before and after implementation of the redesigned service.
| Before | After | |
|---|---|---|
| Number of patients seen in TIA clinic | 18 | 52 |
| Median time (days) from referral to clinic consult—All referrals | 10 | 1 |
| Median time (days) to brain imaging where indicated | 10.5 | 1 |
| Median time (days) to carotid US imaging where indicated | 10 | 0 * (all patients imaged on same day) |
* same day.
Figure 1Patient feedback.