A national stroke coalition today announced
it is advocating for all hospitals to establish stroke
centers or other programs to reduce deaths and disabilities
from stroke.
The June 21, 2000, issue of the "Journal of the American
Medical Association (JAMA)" features the first-ever
recommendations for hospital stroke centers, authored by
members of the Brain Attack Coalition, a group of
professional, volunteer and government organizations
dedicated to improving stroke treatment and prevention.
"Our recommendations are similar to those guiding trauma
centers - getting patients to facilities where the
specialists and infrastructure are in place to evaluate and
treat them quickly. If facilities can put together the
resources to treat trauma patients, why can't they do the
same for stroke patients?" said Mark J. Alberts, M.D., lead
author of the "JAMA" paper. Dr. Alberts is also chairman of
the Stroke Belt Consortium and director of the stroke acute
care unit at Duke University Medical Center.
There are clot-busting medicines and other treatments to
help reverse the symptoms of stroke. Yet, many hospitals
still lack the necessary staff and equipment to triage and
treat stroke patients in the rapid, efficient manner
required. Certain clot-busting therapies must be
administered within 3 hours of symptom onset for the
treatments to be safe and effective.
The two major goals of the stroke center recommendations are
the improvement in the level of care provided to stroke
patients and the standardization of some aspects of acute
care for such patients. The "JAMA" article presents a
blueprint of the components necessary for hospitals to
launch stroke centers and includes estimated costs for the
different components, outlined in the attached fact sheet.
In the article, the authors express their hope that the
adoption of these recommendations will increase the use of
appropriate diagnostic and therapeutic tools and reduce
complications from stroke.
"These recommendations are a perfect example of what the
Brain Attack Coalition came together to do - develop ways to
reduce the death and disability caused by stroke," said
Michael D. Walker, M.D., the coalition's chair and former
director of stroke, trauma and neurodegenerative disorders
at the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and
Stroke at the National Institutes of Health. "Our paper
describes a way for hospitals to significantly improve
outcomes for stroke patients by dedicating the resources
necessary to diagnose and treat stroke patients within the
critical 3-hour time period."
The article's authors define two types of stroke centers to
be established: primary stroke centers to stabilize and
provide emergency care to stroke patients, and comprehensive
stroke centers to provide extensive care for the most
complicated cases.
The current article focuses specifically on primary stroke
centers because most patients are first seen and cared for
in settings most consistent with a primary center. The
authors plan to write a future paper addressing
establishment of recommendations for comprehensive stroke
centers.
The Brain Attack Coalition is a group of professional,
voluntary and government organizations whose mission is to
reduce the occurrence, disabilities and death associated
with stroke. The goal of the coalition - chaired by NINDS -
is to strengthen and promote the relationships among its
member organizations. Coalition members are the American
Academy of Neurology; American Association of Neurological
Surgeons; American Association of Neuroscience Nurses; the
American Stroke Association, a division of the American
Heart Association; American Society of Neuroradiology; the
Congress of Neurological Surgeons; the National Institute of
Neurological Disorders and Stroke; National Stroke
Association; and the Stroke Belt Consortium.