Abstract

Background: Emergency Medical Services (EMS) play an important role as initial providers to stroke patients. Data of on scene and transport times for stroke patients with unbiased populations are rare. We explored the range of times for stroke patients to receive care on scene and transport to a stroke receiving center (SRC) in a region with 3.3 million residents, 18 SRCs and 19 ground transport advanced life support EMS agencies. This will inform researchers on prehospital stroke invervention and policy makers deliberating triage and stroke center designation. Methods: We included all patients with final hospital diagnosis of AIS, ICH, SAH, or TIA transported by EMS to a San Diego County SRC between July 2017 and December 2018 with computer automated dispatch record and base hospital record. Records were linked on EMS incident number, reviewed for accuracy. We analyzed scene and transport time, weekday vs. weekend, last known normal (LKN) to EMS enroute < 6 hours (approximation of LKN to 911 call), EMS recognition of stroke, and final hospital diagnosis. Results: In total, 2,376 patients with final stroke diagnosis were transported between July 2017 and December 2018. In 1,514 (63.7%) cases, EMS recognized stroke. In these cases mean (±SD) scene time was 12.0 (±4.6) minutes and transport time 12.4 (±7.2). In stroke patients without EMS stroke recognition the mean (±SD) scene time was 14.8 (±5.7) (p=.0001) and transport time of 16.2 (±8.1) (p=.0001). Scene time (p=.002), EMS stroke recognition (p=.00001), weekend vs. weekday (p=.013), LKN to enroute < 6 hours (p=.00001) were all correlated with shorter transport time; hospital stroke diagnosis (p=.56) was not. Linear regression indicated LKN to enroute < 6 hours (p=.001) and EMS stroke recognition (p=.00001) were significant in determining shorter transport time. Conclusion: EMS transport time of stroke patients varies across our system. However, when EMS providers recognize a stroke patient, scene time decreases by nearly 3 minutes and transport time decreases by nearly 4 minutes compared with patients with stroke undetected until after hospital arrival. Additionally, patients with a shorter LKN to EMS enroute time have a shorter transport time, which may be clinically important for this time-sensitive condition.

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