In-Hospital Emergency Treatment Delay Among Chinese Patients with Acute Ischaemic Stroke: Relation to Hospital Arrivals and Implications for Triage Pathways

Int J Gen Med. 2023 Jan 5:16:57-68. doi: 10.2147/IJGM.S371687. eCollection 2023.

Abstract

Introduction: Timely access to emergency treatment during in-hospital care phase is critical for managing the onset of acute ischaemic stroke (AIS), particularly in developing countries. We aimed to explore in-hospital emergency treatment delay and the relation of door-to-needle (DTN) time to ambulance arrivals vs walk-in arrivals.

Methods: Data were collected from 1276 Chinese AIS patients admitted to a general, tertiary-level hospital for intravenous thrombolysis. Information on patients' characteristics and time taken during in-hospital emergency treatment was retrieved from the hospital registry data and medical records. Ambulance arrival was defined as being transported by emergency ambulance services, while walk-in arrival was defined as arriving at hospital by regular vehicle. In-hospital emergency treatment delay occurred when the DTN time exceeded 60 minutes. We performed multivariable logistic regression analysis to explore the association between hospital arrivals (by ambulance vs by walk-in) and treatment delay after adjustment for age, sex, education, marital status, residence, medical insurance, number of symptoms, clinical severity and survival outcome.

Results: Over half (53.76%) of patients aged over 60 years. Around one-fifth (20.61%) of patients admitted to hospital through emergency ambulance services, while their counterparts arrived by regular vehicle. Overall, the median time taken from the hospital door to treatment initiation was 86.0 minutes. Patients arrived by ambulance (adjusted odds ratio [aOR] = 1.744, 95% confidence interval [CI] = 1.185-2.566, p = 0.005), had higher socio-economic status (aOR = 1.821, 95% CI = 1.251-2.650; p = 0.002), or paid out-of-pocket (aOR = 2.323, 95% CI = 1.764-3.060; p < 0.001) had an increased likelihood of in-hospital emergency treatment delays.

Conclusion: In-hospital emergency treatment delay is common in China, and occurs throughout the entire emergency treatment journey. Having a triage pathway involving hospital arrival by ambulance seems to be more likely to experience in-hospital emergency treatment delay. Further efforts to improve triage pathways may require qualitative evidence on provider- and institutional-level factors associated with in-hospital emergency treatment delay.

Keywords: acute ischaemic stroke; hospital arrival; in-hospital emergency treatment; treatment delay; triage pathways.

Grants and funding

Basic and Applied Basic Research Foundation of Guangdong Province (2019A1515011381); Guangdong Science and Technology Project (2012B061700050); Medical Research Project of Zhongshan city of Guangdong Province (grant 2021J447); Special Talent Project of Guangdong Open University (Guangdong Polytechnic Institute) (grant RC1923); and Guangdong Philosophy and Social Science Project Planning (grant GD19CGL12), PR China. The funders had no role in study design, data collection, data analysis, data interpretation, or writing of the report.