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Similarity of patient characteristics and outcomes in consecutive data collection on stroke admissions over one month compared to longer periods

Similarity of patient characteristics and outcomes in consecutive data collection on stroke admissions over one month compared to longer periods Thumbnail


Abstract

Background
The usefulness of time-limited consecutive data collection compared to continuous consecutive data collection in conditions which show seasonal variations is unclear. The objective of this study is to assess whether one month of admission data can be representative of data collected over two years in the same hospitals.

Methods
We compared the baseline characteristics and discharge outcomes of stroke patients admitted in the first month (October 2009) of the Anglia Stroke Clinical Network Evaluation Study (ASCNES) with the routinely collected data over 2 years between September 2008 and April 2011 from the same 8 hospital trusts in the Anglia Stroke & Heart Clinical Network (AS&HCN) as well as seasonal cohorts from the same period.

Results
We included a total of 8715 stroke patients (October 2009 cohort of ASCNES (n?=?308), full AS&HCN cohort (n?=?8407 excluding October 2009)) as well as cohorts from different seasons. All cohorts had a similar median age. No significant differences were observed for pre-stroke residence, pre-stroke modified Rankin, weekend vs. weekday admission, time of admission, patients with atrial fibrillation, type of stroke, admission systolic blood pressure, use of thrombolysis (rTPA), in-patient mortality and discharge destination. There were statistically significant differences between cohorts with regard to Oxfordshire Community Stroke Project Classification.

Conclusions
Stroke patients admitted in one month had largely indistinguishable characteristics and discharge outcomes to those admitted to the same trusts in three separate seasons and also over two years in this cohort.

Acceptance Date Sep 19, 2013
Publication Date Jun 6, 2014
Publicly Available Date Mar 28, 2024
Journal BMC Research Notes
Publisher Springer Verlag
Pages 342
DOI https://doi.org/10.1186/1756-0500-7-342
Keywords Stroke; methodology; data collection instruments; mortality
Publisher URL https://doi.org/10.1186/1756-0500-7-342

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