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Factors affecting time between symptom onset and emergency department arrival in stroke patients.

Publication ,  Journal Article
Le, SM; Copeland, LA; Zeber, JE; Benge, JF; Allen, L; Cho, J; Liao, I-C; Rasmussen, J
Published in: eNeurologicalSci
December 2020

BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Delays in seeking care compromise diagnosis, treatment options, and outcomes in ischemic strokes. This study identified factors associated with time between stroke symptom onset and emergency department (ED) arrival at a private nonprofit medical center serving a large rural catchment area in central Texas, with the goal of identifying symptomatic, demographic, and historical factors that might influence seeking care. METHODS: Demographic and clinical data from a large tertiary care center's Get With The Guidelines (GWTG) database were evaluated in 1874 patients presenting to the ED with a diagnosis of transient ischemic attack (TIA), intracranial hemorrhage, subarachnoid hemorrhage, or ischemic stroke. The dependent variable was time between discovery of stroke symptoms and presentation at the hospital (time-to-ED). Factors entered into regression models predicting time-to-ED within 4 h or categorical time-to-ED. RESULTS: The average time from symptom onset to presentation was 15.0 h (sd = 23.2), with 43.6% of the sample presenting within 4 h of symptom onset. Results suggested that female gender (Odds Ratio [OR] = 0.70; 95% Confidence Interval [CI] 0.23-0.74), drug abuse (OR = 0.41; CI 0.23-0.74), and diabetes were significantly associated with longer time to presentation. CONCLUSIONS: A combination of demographics, stroke severity, timing, and health history contributes to delays in presenting for treatment for ischemic stroke. Stroke education concentrating on symptom recognition may benefit from a special focus on high-risk individuals as highlighted in this study.

Duke Scholars

Published In

eNeurologicalSci

DOI

EISSN

2405-6502

Publication Date

December 2020

Volume

21

Start / End Page

100285

Location

Netherlands
 

Citation

APA
Chicago
ICMJE
MLA
NLM
Le, S. M., Copeland, L. A., Zeber, J. E., Benge, J. F., Allen, L., Cho, J., … Rasmussen, J. (2020). Factors affecting time between symptom onset and emergency department arrival in stroke patients. ENeurologicalSci, 21, 100285. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ensci.2020.100285
Le, Scott M., Laurel A. Copeland, John E. Zeber, Jared F. Benge, Leigh Allen, Jinmyoung Cho, I-Chia Liao, and Jennifer Rasmussen. “Factors affecting time between symptom onset and emergency department arrival in stroke patients.ENeurologicalSci 21 (December 2020): 100285. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ensci.2020.100285.
Le SM, Copeland LA, Zeber JE, Benge JF, Allen L, Cho J, et al. Factors affecting time between symptom onset and emergency department arrival in stroke patients. eNeurologicalSci. 2020 Dec;21:100285.
Le, Scott M., et al. “Factors affecting time between symptom onset and emergency department arrival in stroke patients.ENeurologicalSci, vol. 21, Dec. 2020, p. 100285. Pubmed, doi:10.1016/j.ensci.2020.100285.
Le SM, Copeland LA, Zeber JE, Benge JF, Allen L, Cho J, Liao I-C, Rasmussen J. Factors affecting time between symptom onset and emergency department arrival in stroke patients. eNeurologicalSci. 2020 Dec;21:100285.
Journal cover image

Published In

eNeurologicalSci

DOI

EISSN

2405-6502

Publication Date

December 2020

Volume

21

Start / End Page

100285

Location

Netherlands