1. They don't have any quick objective way to diagnose a stroke. That should be accomplished with the tricorder possibly thru one of these 17 ways.
2. No one has any way to stop the neuronal cascade of death.
These 31 things I'm going to insist my doctor give me in the first week.
These 177 possibilities need research
3. They don't tell you either their 30-day death rates or the percent of patients that fully recover.
4. No one has protocols that are vetted and available for viewing.
In my opinion there is no hospital in the world that is ready for any stroke patient to get them to 100% recovery.
http://stroke.ahajournals.org/content/44/12/3289.extract?etoc
- Larry B. Goldstein, MD, FAAN, FANA, FAHA
+ Author Affiliations
- Correspondence to Larry B. Goldstein, MD, FAAN, FANA, FAHA, Box 3651, Department of Neurology, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, NC 27710. E-mail golds004@mc.duke.edu
See related article, p 3382.
In 2005, an
American Stroke Association Task Force report described the rationale
and components of an integrated stroke system
of care extending from primordial prevention
through primary prevention, acute management, secondary prevention, and
poststroke
rehabilitation and recovery.1
The principle that optimal patient outcomes depend on the consistent
implementation of care processes that are based on the
best available evidence and that are facilitated by
key organizational features was implicit in the approach.2
For acute stroke care, a 3-tiered system was envisioned composed of
acute stroke–capable hospitals, having limited resources
but possessing the means to deliver emergent stroke
therapies; primary stroke center (PSC) hospitals, having the additional
capacity to care for patients with stroke after the
acute period; and comprehensive stroke center hospitals, having
specialized
resources and personnel to provide stroke treatment
and rehabilitation that surpass those expected at PSCs.1 This tiered system of organization of hospitals was again endorsed in an updated American Heart Association/American Stroke
Association policy statement.3
At the time of
the original American Stroke Association 2005 Task Force report, in
cooperation with the American Heart Association,
the Joint Commission had already begun certifying
PSC hospitals based on criteria developed by the Brain Attack Coalition
(BAC).4
Started in December 2003, the PSC program has been embraced throughout
the country, with >925 hospitals having been certified
in 48 states as of July 2012 (http://www.jointcommission.org).
The competitive healthcare marketplace in the United States has likely
contributed to a hospital seeking PSC designation
because there was little move to improve
hospital-based stroke-related care organization in the years before the
PSC program
began.5
Several states have now developed their own stroke center certification
programs as well. Joint Commission PSC certification
involves rigorous biannual on-site reviews and
regular reports on a series of quality process measures. The American
Heart
Association’s Get With the Guidelines program and
the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s National Stroke
Registry
support and extend stroke center certification,
with participation leading to incremental gains in compliance with many
of
the required PSC measures.6–8 More recently, the Joint Commission/American Heart Association/American Stroke Association began to certify comprehensive
stroke center hospitals, also based on BAC recommendations.9,10 The BAC has now developed criteria for the last hospital-based component of the 3-tier stroke care system, the limited resource
acute stroke–ready hospital (ASRH).11
Full text here;
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