Abstract

Background: Emergency Medicine Service (EMS) provider compliance with American Heart Association (AHA) guidelines for acute stroke care is low. While early recognition improves in-hospital quality of care, including door-to-computed tomography (CT) time, the impact of compliance with individual recommendations on in-hospital outcomes is unknown. Methods: We identified 410 acute ischemic stroke patients who presented to a Comprehensive Stroke Center via EMS between January 1, 2018, and December 31, 2019. Guideline concordant care was defined as encounters in which EMS documented: a blood glucose, a 12-lead electrocardiogram, a stroke scale result, and time of the last known well; were enroute within less than 2 minutes from dispatch and spent less than 15 minutes on scene. We used a multivariable linear regression model to determine the effect of individual metrics, race/ethnicity, sex, and age on door-to-CT times. Results: There was low compliance with all quality-of-care metrics (37/410 encounters, 9%), but most encounters met at least 4 metrics (60.3%). Compliance with recommendations to maintain short dispatch-to-enroute times and to obtain a blood glucose were the highest (88.1% and 74.5%, respectively). Only 44.5% of encounters documented a stroke scale, but 95.9% documented a neurological exam. A linear regression model identified documentation of classic symptoms (unilateral weakness, facial droop, or speech changes) (parameter estimate -16.6, 95% CI -21.8 to -11.5) and documentation of the last known well time (parameter estimate -15.9, 95% CI -21.6 to -10.1) as significant predictors of door-to-CT times. However, documentation of a last known well occurred only in 59.9% encounters. Conclusions: Like prior studies, this study finds similarly low compliance with AHA stroke guideline and also identifies two key EMS actions that are associated with shorter door-to-CT times - documentation of last known well and recognition and documentation of classic stroke symptoms. Further education is needed to reinforce the importance of individual recommendations such as documentation of last known well and its impact on in-hospital care. Broader analysis of EMS practices is needed to fully understand the impact on additional patient outcomes.

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