Centralising acute stroke services can reduce mortality and length of hospital stay, suggests a study published on thebmj.com.
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During the 2008-2012 study period, mortality and length of hospital stay fell in Greater Manchester, London, and the rest of England. However, in London there was a significant fall in mortality from any cause at 3, 30 and 90 days after admission over and above that seen in the rest of England. At 90 days, the absolute reduction was -1.1, indicating 168 fewer deaths after centralisation in London during the 21 month period after reconfiguration. This translates into 96 extra lives per year. In Greater Manchester, there was no impact on mortality over and above the change seen in the rest of England. In both areas there was also a significant reduction in length of hospital stay over and above that seen in the rest of England: 9% (-2 days) in Greater Manchester and 7% (1.4 days) in London.
These figures equate to 17,685 fewer hospital days in Greater Manchester and 22,341 fewer in London since the reconfigurations, or a total annual saving of 8,842 hospital days in Greater Manchester and 12,766 in London. Reductions in mortality and length of hospital stay were largely seen among patients with ischaemic stroke (when a blood clot blocks an artery that carries blood to the brain).
Further analyses also including 73,558 patients who lived in rural areas had little impact on the results, but the authors stress that greater travel times in rural areas "may make centralisation challenging." The authors say their findings "could also inform the centralisation of other healthcare services such as cancer care, cardiovascular care, major trauma care, and vascular surgery." And they add that future research could "examine the impact of centralising acute stroke services on disability after stroke and also on achievement of care processes and quality of care."
Source-Eurekalert