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UnknownNCT05218135

BIC: Evaluation of the Current Care Processes for Stroke Care in Flemish Hospitals

Evaluation of the Current Care Processes for Stroke Care in Flemish Hospitals Via a Breakthrough Improvement Collaborative

Status
Unknown
Phase
Study type
Observational
Enrollment
2,610 (estimated)
Sponsor
KU Leuven · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

Different studies showed large variation between care processes in multiple diseases, which lead to large variation in outcomes. Better adherence to evidence-based guidelines for these diseases can reduce this variation and can improve the health outcomes. Since international studies have demonstrated wide variations in care processes for acute stroke, it would be interesting to repeat these investigations in the population of stroke patients. Worldwide, stroke is a leading cause of disability and death. Every two seconds, someone across the world experiences a symptomatic stroke. 50% of stroke survivors has moderate to severe neurologic deficits, 25% of them depend on others. In Belgium, stroke is one of the most important causes of invalidity. Every year approximately 18 000 people in Belgium experiences a stroke, which results in almost one person every two hours, with a mortality rate of 30%. The world health organization has the ambition to significantly reduce the mortality and risk factors for non-communicable diseases by 2025. The mortality and disability in stroke patients can be reduced by organized stroke care, which includes effective strategies in stroke management, treatment and prevention. Also, other health domains, like functional recovery, healthcare costs and patient satisfaction, were positively related to adherence on stroke guidelines. This evidence had been converted in several clinical guidelines for stroke care. However, the adherence to these guidelines is variable. As already mentioned before, international studies have demonstrated wide variations in care processes for acute stroke. However, a positive relationship has been shown between the implementation of evidence-based clinical guidelines and the quality of stroke care. Therefore, it is important to both implement these guidelines and to improve the adherence to them. The aim of this study is to map the variation in stroke care in Flemish hospitals and to get an overview about the variation within and between these hospitals. During this study, electronic patient records will be analyzed to check which interventions are performed in a specific patient and of which no information could be found in de patient record.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
OTHERInterventionLearning session 1: explain key interventions, explain BIC methodology, retrospective patient record analysis Learning session 2: feedback report, share best practices, discussion, set priorities, teaching and improvement, retrospective patient record analysis Learning session 3: feedback report, share best practices, discussion, set priorities, teaching and improvement, retrospective patient record analysis Learning session 4: feedback report

Timeline

Start date
2021-03-01
Primary completion
2024-12-31
Completion
2024-12-31
First posted
2022-02-01
Last updated
2023-02-09

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Belgium

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT05218135. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.

BIC: Evaluation of the Current Care Processes for Stroke Care in Flemish Hospitals (NCT05218135) · Clinical Trials Directory