This is the whole problem in stroke enumerated in one word; 'care'; NOT RECOVERY!
If your hospital is touting 'care' it means they are a failure because they are delivering 'care'; NOT RECOVERY! I would never go to a failed hospital!
YOU have to get involved and change this failure mindset of 'care' to 100% RECOVERY! Survivors want RECOVERY, NOT 'CARE'!
I see nothing here that states going for 100% recovery! You need to create EXACT PROTOCOLS FOR THAT!
ASK SURVIVORS WHAT THEY WANT, THEY'LL NEVER RESPOND 'CARE'! This tyranny of low expectations has to be completely rooted out of any stroke conversation! I wouldn't go there because of such incompetency as not having 100% recovery protocols!
RECOVERY IS THE ONLY GOAL IN STROKE!
GET THERE!'
U.S. News adds American Heart Association stroke care measure to national hospital ratings
DALLAS, July 28, 2025 U.S. News has long factored in hospitals’ public reporting status into its rankings. A public transparency measure, based on registry participation, accounts for 2.5% of the publication’s Best Regional Hospitals rankings. This year, an additional 2.5% of each hospital’s stroke score will be based on the speed at which eligible patients receive IV thrombolytics, a clot-dissolving medication used to treat ischemic stroke. This timely administration is a critical driver of patient outcomes.[1]
Data from the Association’s Get With The Guidelines - Stroke registry powers this new measure. Hospitals publicly reporting an 85% or higher rate of IV thrombolytic administration within 60 minutes of arrival receive full credit. Hospitals with lower rates receive partial credit, and those that do not report publicly receive no credit for this or the transparency measure.
“One of the biggest differentiating advantages of our data is that we capture reasons for non-treatment, which most electronic health records and other data sources lack. These data are critical in establishing the credibility of our quality measurement reporting systems,” said Lee Schwamm, M.D., FAHA, American Heart Association volunteer who originally helped to establish the Get With The Guidelines - Stroke program. Schwamm is also senior vice president and chief digital health officer at Yale New Haven Health System, and associate dean of digital strategy and transformation and professor of neurology, biomedical informatics and data sciences at Yale School of Medicine. “We applaud U.S. News & World Report for including the time-to-thrombolytics measure — it speaks to the real-time impact of the Get With The Guidelines program and the Association’s role in improving health outcomes through accelerating the translation of evidence into practice in cardiovascular and stroke care(NOT RECOVERY!).”
“This new ranking component helps validate the Association’s registry as a gold-standard resource and signals to hospitals the continued importance of stroke systems of care(NOT RECOVERY!),” said Gregg Fonarow, M.D., FAHA, American Heart Association volunteer and member of the Association’s Stroke Systems of Care Advisory Group. Fonarow is also director of the Ahmanson-UCLA Cardiomyopathy Center, co-director of the Preventative Cardiology Program and the Eliot Corday Chair in Cardiovascular Medicine and Science at the University of California, Los Angeles.
Public reporting plays a vital role in advancing both hospital performance and patient empowerment. For hospitals, it fosters a team-based approach to accountability, showcases efforts to implement quality improvement initiatives, and helps identify areas needing attention. It also opens the door to inclusion in national hospital rankings, further incentivizing high-quality care(NOT RECOVERY!). For individuals, public reporting offers a transparent snapshot of hospital performance, increasing awareness of key care(NOT RECOVERY!) measures and supporting more informed decision-making when choosing where to receive treatment. Together, these benefits drive a culture of continuous improvement and trust(No trust here when you talk 'care' NOT RESULTS! I'd fire all of you for such crapola!) in health care(NOT RECOVERY!).
Learn more about the American Heart Association’s quality improvement initiatives at heart.org/quality.
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