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Organised inpatient (stroke unit) care for stroke

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TLDR
Outcomes were independent of patient age, sex or stroke severity, but appeared to be better in stroke units based in a discrete ward, and there was no indication that organised stroke unit care resulted in a longer hospital stay.
Abstract
BACKGROUND\nOrganised stroke unit care is provided by multidisciplinary teams that exclusively manage stroke patients in a dedicated ward (stroke, acute, rehabilitation, comprehensive), with a mobile stroke team or within a generic disability service (mixed rehabilitation ward).\n\n\nOBJECTIVES\nTo assess the effect of stroke unit care compared with alternative forms of care for patients following a stroke.\n\n\nSEARCH STRATEGY\nWe searched the Cochrane Stroke Group trials register (last searched April 2006), the reference lists of relevant articles, and contacted researchers in the field.\n\n\nSELECTION CRITERIA\nRandomised and prospective controlled clinical trials comparing organised inpatient stroke unit care with an alternative service.\n\n\nDATA COLLECTION AND ANALYSIS\nTwo review authors initially assessed eligibility and trial quality. Descriptive details and trial data were then checked with the co-ordinators of the original trials.\n\n\nMAIN RESULTS\nThirty-one trials, involving 6936 participants, compared stroke unit care with an alternative service; more organised care was consistently associated with improved outcomes. Twenty-six trials (5592 participants) compared stroke unit care with general wards. Stroke unit care showed reductions in the odds of death recorded at final (median one year) follow up (odds ratio (OR) 0.86; 95% confidence interval (CI) 0.76 to 0.98; P = 0.02), the odds of death or institutionalised care (OR 0.82; 95% CI 0.73 to 0.92; P = 0.0006) and death or dependency (OR 0.82; 95% CI 0.73 to 0.92; P = 0.001). Sensitivity analyses indicated that the observed benefits remained when the analysis was restricted to trials that used formal randomisation procedures with blinded outcome assessment. Outcomes were independent of patient age, sex or stroke severity, but appeared to be better in stroke units based in a discrete ward. There was no indication that organised stroke unit care resulted in a longer hospital stay.\n\n\nAUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS\nStroke patients who receive organised inpatient care in a stroke unit are more likely to be alive, independent, and living at home one year after the stroke. The benefits were most apparent in units based in a discrete ward. No systematic increase was observed in the length of inpatient stay.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Guidelines for the Early Management of Patients With Acute Ischemic Stroke A Guideline for Healthcare Professionals From the American Heart Association/American Stroke Association

TL;DR: These guidelines supersede the prior 2007 guidelines and 2009 updates and support the overarching concept of stroke systems of care and detail aspects of stroke care from patient recognition; emergency medical services activation, transport, and triage; through the initial hours in the emergency department and stroke unit.
References
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Book

Measurement in Neurological Rehabilitation

TL;DR: This review discusses both new measures and new work on more well-established measures, both for use in specific diseases and for more general use, that are slowly being developed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Preventing stroke: saving lives around the world

TL;DR: A worldwide goal for stroke is proposed: a 2% reduction each year over and above that which may happen as a result of better case management and treatment, which would result in 6.4 million fewer deaths from stroke from 2005 to 2015.
Journal ArticleDOI

Do stroke units save lives

TL;DR: A statistical overview of randomised controlled trials reported between 1962 and 1993 in which the management of stroke patients in a specialist unit was compared with that in general wards is presented in this article.
Journal ArticleDOI

Benefit of a stroke unit: a randomized controlled trial.

TL;DR: Care of patients with acute stroke in a stroke unit improves clinical outcome compared with treatment in general medical wards and functional state was significantly better for patients treated in the stroke unit after both 6 and 52 weeks.
Journal ArticleDOI

Treatment in a combined acute and rehabilitation stroke unit: which aspects are most important?

TL;DR: Shorter time to start of mobilization/training was the most important factor associated with discharge to home, followed by stabilized diastolic BP, indicating that these factors probably were important in the SU treatment.
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