How Do Stroke Units Improve Patient Outcomes?
- 1 November 1997
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Stroke
- Vol. 28 (11), 2139-2144
- https://doi.org/10.1161/01.str.28.11.2139
Abstract
We sought to clarify the way in which organized inpatient (stroke unit) care can produce reductions in case fatality and in the need for institutional care after stroke. We performed a secondary analysis of a collaborative systematic review of all randomized trials that compared organized inpatient (stroke unit) care with contemporary conventional care. Nineteen trials were included, of which 18 (3246 patients) could provide outcome data on death, place of residence, and final functional outcome. Data were less complete (but always available for at least 12 trials; 1611 patients) for subgroup analyses examining timing and cause of death and outcomes in patients with different levels of severity of initial stroke. The reduction in case fatality of patients managed in a stroke unit setting developed between 1 and 4 weeks after the index stroke. The reduction in the odds of death was evident across all causes of death and most marked for those deaths considered to be secondary to immobility. However, data were insufficient to permit a firm conclusion. The relative increase in the number of patients discharged home from stroke units as opposed to conventional care was largely attributable to an increase in the number of patients returning home physically independent. Across the range of stroke severity, stroke unit care was associated with nonsignificant increases in the number of patients regaining independence. Within the limitations of the available data, we conclude that organized inpatient stroke unit care probably benefits a wide range of stroke patients in a variety of different ways, ie, reducing death from secondary complications of stroke and reducing the need for institutional care through a reduction in disability.Keywords
This publication has 14 references indexed in Scilit:
- Fortnightly Review: So stroke units save lives: where do we go from here?BMJ, 1994
- Managing stroke: the way forward.BMJ, 1993
- Do stroke units save lives?The Lancet, 1993
- Medical treatment of acute ischaemic strokeThe Lancet, 1992
- Classification and natural history of clinically identifiable subtypes of cerebral infarctionThe Lancet, 1991
- Meta-analysis in clinical trialsControlled Clinical Trials, 1986
- A RANDOMIZED CONTROLLED TRIAL OF A STROKE REHABILITATION WARDAge and Ageing, 1984
- Management of acute stroke in the elderly: follow-up of a controlled trial.BMJ, 1980
- Evaluation of rehabilitation methods in the hemiplegic patientJournal of Chronic Diseases, 1966
- A comparison of functionally orientated medical care and formal rehabilitation in the management of patients with hemiplegia due to cerebrovascular diseaseJournal of Chronic Diseases, 1962