Abstract

Introduction: Rapid emergency medical services (EMS) response, care, and transport of acute stroke patients increases the likelihood of receiving time-sensitive treatment. There is limited research on the relationship of community factors with prehospital delays in EMS management of stroke. We compared EMS prehospital time intervals for suspected stroke patients by community socioeconomic status (SES) and urban-rural status in North Carolina (NC). Methods: We analyzed 2019 NC EMS encounter data collected in the National EMS Information System Version 3 standard. Eligible patients were adults requiring a 911 call response by EMS for stroke-like symptoms and transport to the hospital. Incident street addresses were geocoded to census tracts using ArcGIS Pro and linked to SES data from the American Community Survey and rural-urban commuting area (RUCA) codes. Community SES was defined as high, medium, or low based on tertiles of the AHRQ SES index. Urban, suburban, and rural tracts were defined by RUCA codes 1, 2-6, and 7-10, respectively. Differences in mean times by community SES and urban-rural status were evaluated using Kruskal Wallis tests. Results: We identified 17,117 eligible EMS encounters of suspected stroke (65% (11,121 of 17,117) 65+ years old; 55% (9,330 of 17,117) female; 70% (11,839 of 17,117) White) from 2,028 tracts. Median response, scene, and transport times were 8 (interquartile range, IQR 6-11) min, 16 (IQR 12-20) min, and 14 (IQR 9-22) min, respectively. Mean transport times were shorter in low SES (16 min) than in medium and high SES communities (17 min, p<.0001). Mean transport times were longer in rural (21 min) and suburban (19 min) than in urban tracts (14 min, p<.0001). Conclusions: EMS transport times were on average longer for suspected stroke patients in rural but not in low SES tracts. Further research is needed on the role of community socioeconomic deprivation and rurality in contributing to delays in prehospital stroke care.

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