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| Stroke Sentinel Audit Programme: Investigating and Evaluating Stroke Therapy (SSNAPIEST) |
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Record Status This is a bibliographic record of an ongoing health technology assessment being undertaken by a member of INAHTA. Links to the published report and any other relevant documentation will be added when available. Citation Stroke Sentinel Audit Programme: Investigating and Evaluating Stroke Therapy (SSNAPIEST) Health Services and Delivery Research Authors' objectives BACKGROUND: Stroke is the UK s greatest cause of adult disability. Therapy (physical, occupational and speech therapy) is an important aspect of stroke care that helps stroke patients regain movement, communication and thinking skills so they can look after themselves and return to important activities. We know therapy is effective but in the UK, most patients receive sub-optimal amounts of therapy1 AIMS: We want to improve this situation. So we need to understand WHY insufficient therapy is provided. In the UK, we have a unique opportunity using data from the Sentinel Stroke National Audit Programme (SSNAP). SSNAP is a national stroke register that audits care from admission to 6 month follow-up, involving all acute stroke services in England and Wales (95% of all stroke admissions, ~80,000 per year) and ~250 community services SSNAP regularly publishes detailed information describing the following for hospital and community services1: stroke therapy provision; processes of care; how services are organised; outcomes from the patients and organisations point of view. However it only describes what happens. It does not explain HOW these factors are inter-linked; WHY therapy does not happen; how much therapy services COST, nor which are the MOST EFFECTIVE ways to organise them. We will work this out. A challenge for stroke therapy is that stroke can cause many types of difficulties, disabilities and potential to recover. These factors affect which therapy best suits each individual. Recently the idea of stratified health care has emerged, based on the recognition that treatment works best when it is closely tailored to individuals needs. As a secondary aim, we wish to apply this principle to stroke therapy. We will use SSNAP data to investigate how disabilities occur together (or cluster ) and, for particular groups, whether these are associated with different levels of therapy and recovery. This information will help to develop specific treatments and pathways for patient sub-group in the future. As the treatments will more accurately suit individual patients, we can expect them to be more effective, enabling greater recovery and less long-term support from health and social care services, resulting in cost savings to an overburdened health system. DESIGN: We will analyse the most up-to-date, relevant SSNAP data available to us; a huge data-set involving ~160,000 patient records. The managers of the SSNAP programme will use established methods to identify the relevant data for candidates for therapy . These are stroke survivors who are in-patient for at least 3 days, conscious; not receiving end-of life care, and disabled by the stroke. We will then use sophisticated statistical and health economics techniques to answer the study objectives. PATIENT AND PUBLIC INVOLVEMENT: We have an established partnership with the PPI panel at the Manchester s Stroke Research Centre. They recognise stroke therapy as a priority and consider the questions important and appropriate. They will collaborate throughout the project, have contributed to this plain English summary and will contribute to the detailed analysis plan, interpretation of results and material to publicise the findings to stroke survivors Indexing Status Subject indexing assigned by CRD MeSH Health Care Quality, Access, and Evaluation; Hospital Units; Humans; Stroke Language Published English Country of organisation England English summary An English language summary is available. Address for correspondence HS&DR Programme, National Institute for Health Research, Evaluation, Trials and Studies Coordinating Centre, University of Southampton, Alpha House, Enterprise Road, Southampton, SO16 7NS, UK Tel: +44 23 8059 4304
Email: hsdrinfo@southampton.ac.uk AccessionNumber 32016000654 Date abstract record published 03/05/2016 |
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