Patient outcomes and length of stay in a stroke unit offering both acute and rehabilitation services |
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Authors: | Ang Yan H Chan Daniel K Y Heng Derrick M K Shen Qing |
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Institution: | Aged Care and Rehabilitation, Bankstown-Lidcombe Hospital, Sydney, NSW. Yan_Hoon_ANG@alexhosp.com.sg |
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Abstract: | OBJECTIVES: To compare hospital length of stay (LOS) and outcome after stroke between patients in a stroke unit offering combined acute and rehabilitation services and patients treated elsewhere in New South Wales. DESIGN: Retrospective audit of two hospital databases (Diagnosis-Related Groups DRG] database and Australian National Subacute Non-Acute Patient Classification System AN-SNAP] database), with comparison with DRG and AN-SNAP data for NSW. SETTING AND PARTICIPANTS: 242 episodes of acute stroke in patients admitted to the stroke unit of a metropolitan teaching hospital between July 1999 and November 2000, 113 of whom also underwent rehabilitation in the unit; 9777 episodes of acute stroke in the NSW DRG database, and 2350 in the NSW AN-SNAP database. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Acute and rehabilitation LOS; mortality in acute care; FIM (Functional Independence Measure) score at discharge and change in FIM score; and discharge destination. RESULTS: Patients in the combined stroke unit had shorter LOS and better functional outcome in all DRG and AN-SNAP groups, with both higher discharge FIM scores and greater gain in FIM scores than NSW patients. Acute stroke mortality of 12% and nursing home admission rate of 15.5% in the combined stroke unit were not significantly different from rates for NSW (15.7% and 11.2%, respectively). CONCLUSIONS: Combining acute and rehabilitation services in a stroke unit may reduce LOS and improve functional outcome of patients with acute stroke. |
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