Abstract

Objectives: One of the principal cornerstones of the Minnesota Department of Health’s Stroke Program is quality improvement. Minnesota Primary (PSC) and Comprehensive Stroke Center (CSC) hospitals have consistently demonstrated performance below the national benchmark (76%) for dysphagia screening. We formed a workgroup comprised of stroke coordinators from across the Minnesota Stroke System to stratify the data by race, ethnicity, and insurance status and collectively identify ways to improve dysphagia screening for stroke patients. Methods: In 2021, MN Stroke Registry data was analyzed for dysphagia screening performance and compliance. Data was stratified by race, ethnicity and insurance status to assess for variance in performance. Disparities by patient race/ethnicity and an overall underperformance on this measure in MN compared to hospitals nationwide was identified. Work group members developed an action plan to improve resources and increase dysphagia screening performance. Results: In Minnesota, Asian (63%) and African American (68%) stroke patients are less likely to be screened for dysphagia than stroke patients overall (76%). Patients on Medicaid were also slightly less likely to receive dysphagia screening. Statewide initiatives included: guidance on stratifying site-specific data; creation of Impaired Swallowing Education for medical providers accessible on YouTube, cultural considerations, and electronic health record best practices; facilitators and barriers were reported and shared. Conclusions: The overall percentage of dysphagia screening compliance has remained steady at 77%. Continuation of the QI project will focus on identifying group participants that are actively engaged and implementing programmatic changes to improve dysphagia screening and identify disparities within their organizations. Education was successfully disseminated to 136 hospitals across the Minnesota Stroke System with over 450 views on YouTube. The work group is exploring further development of data disaggregation standards, specific to the diverse and growing populations of Minnesota. This is a vital step to develop more effective strategies and interventions that directly address health disparities.

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