BMJ Open (Jul 2022)

Real-world, feasibility study to investigate the use of a multidisciplinary app (Pulsara) to improve prehospital communication and timelines for acute stroke/STEMI care

  • Joosup Kim,
  • Dominique A Cadilhac,
  • Karen Smith,
  • Ramesh Sahathevan,
  • Stephen Bernard,
  • Dion Stub,
  • Voltaire Nadurata,
  • Ernesto Oqueli,
  • Thomas Kraemer,
  • Chris F Bladin,
  • Kathleen L Bagot,
  • Michelle Vu,
  • Grant Hocking,
  • Tessa Coupland,
  • Debra Pearce,
  • Diane Badcock,
  • Marc Budge,
  • Wayne Pearce,
  • Howard Hall,
  • Ben Kelly,
  • Angie Spencer,
  • Pauline Chapman,
  • Casey Hair

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2021-052332
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 7

Abstract

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Objectives To determine if a digital communication app improves care timelines for patients with suspected acute stroke/ST-elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI).Design Real-world feasibility study, quasi-experimental design.Setting Prehospital (25 Ambulance Victoria branches) and within-hospital (2 hospitals) in regional Victoria, Australia.Participants Paramedics or emergency department (ED) clinicians identified patients with suspected acute stroke (onset <4.5 hours; n=604) or STEMI (n=247).Intervention The Pulsara communication app provides secure, two-way, real-time communication. Assessment and treatment times were recorded for 12 months (May 2017–April 2018), with timelines compared between ‘Pulsara initiated’ (Pulsara) and ‘not initiated’ (no Pulsara).Primary outcome measure Door-to-treatment (needle for stroke, balloon for STEMI) Secondary outcome measures: ambulance and hospital processes.Results Stroke (no Pulsara n=215, Pulsara n=389) and STEMI (no Pulsara n=76, Pulsara n=171) groups were of similar age and sex (stroke: 76 vs 75 years; both groups 50% male; STEMI: 66 vs 63 years; 68% and 72% male). When Pulsara was used, patients were off ambulance stretcher faster for stroke (11(7, 17) vs 19(11, 29); p=0.0001) and STEMI (14(7, 23) vs 19(10, 32); p=0.0014). ED door-to-first medical review was faster (6(2, 14) vs 23(8, 67); p=0.0001) for stroke but only by 1 min for STEMI (3 (0, 7) vs 4 (0, 14); p=0.25). Door-to-CT times were 44 min faster (27(18, 44) vs 71(43, 147); p=0.0001) for stroke, and percutaneous intervention door-to-balloon times improved by 17 min, but non-significant (56 (34, 88) vs 73 (49, 110); p=0.41) for STEMI. There were improvements in the proportions of patients treated within 60 min for stroke (12%–26%, p=0.15) and 90 min for STEMI (50%–78%, p=0.20).Conclusions In this Australian-first study, uptake of the digital communication app was strong, patient-centred care timelines improved, although door-to-treatment times remained similar.