Abstract

Stroke registries are observational databases focusing on the clinical information and outcomes of stroke patients. They play an important role in the cycle of quality improvement. Registry data are collected from real-world experiences of stroke care and are suitable for measuring quality of care. By exposing inadequacies in performance measures of stroke care, research from stroke registries has changed how we manage stroke patients in Taiwan. With the success of various quality improvement campaigns, mortality from stroke and recurrence of stroke have decreased in the past decade. After the implementation of a nationwide stroke registry, researchers have been creatively expanding how they use and collect registry data for research. Through the use of the nationwide stroke registry as a common data model, researchers from many hospitals have built their own stroke registries with extended data elements to meet the needs of research. In collaboration with information technology professionals, stroke registry systems have changed from web-based, manual submission systems to automated fill-in systems in some hospitals. Furthermore, record linkage between stroke registries and administrative claims databases or other existing databases has widened the utility of registry data in research. Using stroke registry data as the reference standard, researchers have validated several algorithms for ascertaining the diagnosis of stroke and its risk factors from claims data, and have also developed a claims-based index to estimate stroke severity. By making better use of registry data, we believe that we will provide better care to patients with stroke.

Highlights

  • As has been observed in other developed countries, Taiwan has experienced a significant transition in the epidemiology of stroke [1]

  • Something must have been done right for such progress to have been made, and we speculate that the development of stroke registries and the associated quality improvement initiatives likely played an important role in this progress

  • We review what we have learned about stroke registries over the past decade

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Summary

Open Access

Stroke registries are observational databases focusing on the clinical information and outcomes of stroke patients. They play an important role in the cycle of quality improvement. Registry data are collected from real-world experiences of stroke care and are suitable for measuring quality of care. By exposing inadequacies in performance measures of stroke care, research from stroke registries has changed how we manage stroke patients in Taiwan. After the implementation of a nationwide stroke registry, researchers have been creatively expanding how they use and collect registry data for research. Through the use of the nationwide stroke registry as a common data model, researchers from many hospitals have built their own stroke registries with extended data elements to meet the needs of research.

INTRODUCTION
WHAT IS A STROKE REGISTRY?
STROKE REGISTRIES AND THE CYCLE OF QUALITY IMPROVEMENT
TAIWAN STROKE REGISTRY
RESEARCH FROM THE TAIWAN STROKE REGISTRY
TAIWAN STROKE REGISTRY AS A COMMON DATA MODEL
STROKE REGISTRIES AND ELECTRONIC MEDICAL RECORDS
RECORD LINKAGE
FUTURE PERSPECTIVES
Claims data
Findings
CONCLUSION
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