Conference Coverage

AAN: Finding ways to improve door-to-needle times in stroke treatment


 

AT THE AAN 2015 ANNUAL MEETING

References

Acting as patients, three medical students were given two unique stroke scenarios each, with stories and specific instructions; vascular neurologists did a face-to-face assessment and a remote iTREAT assessment from the hospital as the students traveled along the major routes to UVA Medical Center. NIHSS scores in the ambulance with the iTREAT system and with face-to-face assessments correlated well, with an overall intraclass correlation of 0.98, Mr. Padrick reported.

The ratings of audio-video quality during the iTREAT evaluations were judged to be ”good” or “excellent” and the NIHSS correlations and audio-video quality ratings improved with time, he added.

“We currently have IRB approval to move forward with real, live patient encounters and we are currently outfitting and training our local EMS agencies” with the system, Mr. Padrick said in an interview after the meeting.

Mr. Padrick has received research support from the American Heart Association. Dr. Judd had nothing to disclose.

emechcatie@frontlinemedcom.com

Pages

Recommended Reading

VIDEO: Expert picks top studies in Alzheimer’s, migraine, and stroke at AAN
MDedge Emergency Medicine
AAN: Cleveland mobile stroke unit reduces time to thrombolysis
MDedge Emergency Medicine
PAS: Antibiotic risk factors for recurrent C. difficile unique in children
MDedge Emergency Medicine
PAS: Even slight preterm/low-weight births increase infection risk
MDedge Emergency Medicine
AAS: Experts say suicide research needs a reboot
MDedge Emergency Medicine
AAN: OnabotulinumtoxinA injections reduce migraine hospitalizations
MDedge Emergency Medicine
PAS: Bronchiolitis clinical pathway reduces length of stay, costs, readmissions
MDedge Emergency Medicine
AAN: Largest neuroleptic malignant syndrome study finds predictors of poor outcome
MDedge Emergency Medicine
ED visits for tramadol misuse more than double over 5 years
MDedge Emergency Medicine
SAEM: STEMI in the ED: Will lower incidence threaten timely care?
MDedge Emergency Medicine

Related Articles