Selected article for: "clinical observation and single center"

Author: Desai, Shashvat M.; Guyette, Francis X.; Martin-Gill, Christian; Jadhav, Ashutosh P.
Title: Collateral damage – Impact of a pandemic on stroke emergency services
  • Cord-id: dc8g4w2a
  • Document date: 2020_6_10
  • ID: dc8g4w2a
    Snippet: BACKGROUND: The COVID-19 pandemic's impact on stroke care is two-fold — direct impact of the infection and indirect impact on non-COVID-19 diseases. Anecdotal evidence and clinical observation suggest that there is a decrease in the number of patients presenting with stroke during the pandemic. We aim to understand the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on the utilization of stroke emergency services on a single comprehensive stroke center (CSC). METHODS: We performed a retrospective analysis of
    Document: BACKGROUND: The COVID-19 pandemic's impact on stroke care is two-fold — direct impact of the infection and indirect impact on non-COVID-19 diseases. Anecdotal evidence and clinical observation suggest that there is a decrease in the number of patients presenting with stroke during the pandemic. We aim to understand the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on the utilization of stroke emergency services on a single comprehensive stroke center (CSC). METHODS: We performed a retrospective analysis of a prospectively maintained database and compared all emergency department (ED) encounters, acute stroke admissions (including TIA), and thrombectomy cases admitted in March 2017-2019 to patients admitted in March 2020 at a comprehensive stroke center. RESULTS: Number of total ED encounters (22%, p=0.005), acute ischemic strokes (40%, p=0.001), and TIAs (60%, p=0.163) decreased between March of 2017–2019 compared to March of 2020. The number of patients undergoing EVT in March 2020 was comparable to March 2017–2019 (p=0.430). CONCLUSION: A pandemic-related stay-at-home policy reduces the utilization of stroke emergency services at a CSC. This effect appears to be more prominent for ED encounters, all stroke admissions and TIAs, and less impactful for severe strokes. Given the relatively low prevalence of COVID-19 cases in our region, this decrement is likely related to healthcare seeking behavior rather than capacity saturation.

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