Frontiers in Neurology (Feb 2020)

No Evidence of the “Weekend Effect” in the Northern New South Wales Telestroke Network

  • Thomas Lillicrap,
  • Thomas Lillicrap,
  • Alex Pinheiro,
  • Ferdinand Miteff,
  • Pablo Garcia-Bermejo,
  • Shyam Gangadharan,
  • Thomas Wellings,
  • Billy O'Brien,
  • James Evans,
  • Khaled Alanati,
  • Andrew Bivard,
  • Mark Parsons,
  • Christopher Levi,
  • Christopher Levi,
  • Christopher Levi,
  • Carlos Garcia-Esperon,
  • Carlos Garcia-Esperon,
  • Neil Spratt,
  • Neil Spratt

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fneur.2020.00130
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11

Abstract

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Background: Admission outside normal business hours has been associated with prolonged door-to-treatment times and poorer patient outcomes, the so called “weekend effect. ” This is the first examination of the weekend effect in a telestroke service that uses multi-modal computed tomography.Aims: To examine differences in workflow and triage between in-hours and out-of-hours calls to a telestroke service.Methods: All patients assessed using the Northern New South Wales (N-NSW) telestroke service from April 2013 to January 2019 were eligible for inclusion (674 in total; 539 with complete data). The primary outcomes measured were differences between in-hours and out-of-hours in door-to-call-to-decision-to-needle times, differences in the proportion of patients confirmed to have strokes or of patients selected for reperfusion therapies or patients with a modified Rankin Score (mRS ≤ 2) at 90 days.Results: There were no significant differences between in-hours and out-of-hours in any of the measured times, nor in the proportions of patients confirmed to have strokes (67.6 and 69.6%, respectively, p = 0.93); selected for reperfusion therapies (22.7 and 22.6%, respectively, p = 0.56); or independent at 3 months (34.8 and 33.6%, respectively, p = 0.770). There were significant differences in times between individual hospitals, and patient presentation more than 4.5 h after symptom onset was associated with slower times (21 minute delay in door-to-call, p = 0.002 and 22 min delay in door-to-image, p = 0.001).Conclusions: The weekend effect is not evident in the Northern NSW telestroke network experience, though this study did identify some opportunities for improvement in the delivery of acute stroke therapies.

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