Monday, July 21, 2025

Two area hospitals awarded for stroke care

 

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!'

Two area hospitals awarded for stroke care

GRAND ISLAND, Neb. (KSNB) - CHI Health Good Samaritan and CHI Health St. Francis, the region’s designated Primary Stroke Centers, have been awarded the American Heart Association and American Stroke Association’s Get With The Guidelines Stroke Gold Plus award with Target: Stroke Honor Roll Elite and Target: Type 2 Diabetes Honor Roll.

The honor recognizes both hospitals’ sustained commitment to delivering effective stroke treatment, including a high designation for rapidly restoring blood-flow to minimize damage and improve recovery. Fewer than 30 percent of U.S. patients with acute ischemic stroke are treated within the ideal 60-minute door-to-thrombolytic therapy window.
Good Samaritan also received the Get With The Guidelines Rural Stroke Gold award, the highest designation. This award recognizes the hospital’s commitment to addressing health disparities in rural areas by adhering to evidence-based standards, including prompt arrival-to-treatment times. As an urban hospital, St. Francis was not eligible.
According to the American Heart Association and American Stroke Association, stroke is the No. 5 cause of death and a leading cause of adult disability in the United States. On average, someone in the U.S. suffers a stroke every 40 seconds and nearly 795,000 people suffer a new or recurrent stroke each year.

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