Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT03228251

Simulation-based Training of Rapid Evaluation and Management for Acute Stroke (STREAM) Trial

Simulation-based Training of Rapid Evaluation and Management for Acute Stroke (STREAM) - Multicentric Prospective Interventional Study for the Improvement of Acute Stroke Care

Status
Completed
Phase
Study type
Observational
Enrollment
379 (actual)
Sponsor
Johann Wolfgang Goethe University Hospital · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers

Summary

Acute stroke care is highly time critical for thrombolysis as well as thrombectomy. In both scenarios, each minute lost reduces the therapeutic efficacy. Therefore, an optimal implementation of these effective therapies into daily clinical practice is of utmost importance for the translation of the evidence from clinical trials into good clinical outcomes in routine care. In acute stroke therapy, the patient is cared for by an interdisciplinary team and often has to undergo several handovers between different caregivers with possible interface problems. To facilitate a smooth workflow, the investigator developed an interdisciplinary stroke team algorithm and implemented regular simulation-based team trainings at the investigators institution. This multimodal intervention markedly improved the "door-to-needle" time for thrombolysis (time from the patient's arrival in the emergency department to the start of the tissue plasminogen activator (tPA) infusion) which is the most relevant benchmark parameter for acute stroke care. The investigators monthly stroke team training had a positive effect on the perceived degree of safety and staff satisfaction among the employees of the investigators departments. The investigator plans to investigate the benefits of the multimodal intervention of a stroke team algorithm with regular stroke team simulation training in a controlled prospective pretest-posttest trial design at seven leading stroke centers in Germany. The investigator hypothesize that the implementation of a stroke team algorithm (defined team, defined tasks) and regular stroke team training with a focus on efficient team work and communication will improve process times, patient safety and staff satisfaction. In the pretest period, the participating seven centers (tertiary care university hospitals with thrombectomy capacity 24/7/365) record the data of all consecutive patients receiving thrombolysis and/or thrombectomy during a three month period. Afterwards 3-4 leading employees of different professional backgrounds (e.g. senior neurologist of the stroke unit, neurointerventionalist, head nurse of emergency department) will be invited to a joint "train-the-trainer" seminar at the sponsors institution where the participating centers present their algorithm to the participants of all seven stroke centers for discussion to invite suggestions for streamlining and improvement and a train-the-trainer course of stroke simulation. After the seminar, the principal investigator and stroke team trainer will visit all centers for one in situ stroke team simulation training and provide teaching materials. Afterwards, each center will be invited to schedule two additional stroke team trainings a with stroke team trainer that will be led by e.g. the senior neurologist from the respective stroke unit with the aim of permanently starting up regular stroke team simulation. In the posttest period, the participating seven centers again record the data of all consecutive patients receiving thrombolysis and/or thrombectomy during a three month time period.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
OTHERStroke team simulation trainingThe participating centers identify 3-4 senior staff of different professional backgrounds (e.g. senior neurologist, neurointerventionalist, head nurse) who will design a stroke team algorithm tailored to the local circumstances of the stroke center. The centers will be invited to a joint "train-the-trainer" seminar at the sponsor's institution where they present their algorithm to the participants of all seven stroke centers for discussion to invite suggestions for streamlining and improvement. The teams will be introduced to the concept of simulation-based stroke team training. After the seminar, the principal investigator and the stroke team trainer will visit all centers for one on-site stroke team training and provide teaching materials. Afterwards, each center will be invited to schedule two additional stroke team trainings with the stroke team trainer that will be led by e.g. the senior neurologist from the stroke unit with use of a simulation manikin.

Timeline

Start date
2017-10-16
Primary completion
2019-03-11
Completion
2019-03-31
First posted
2017-07-24
Last updated
2019-06-28

Locations

7 sites across 1 country: Germany

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT03228251. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.