Evaluating the Safety and Efficacy of Telemedicine Physician Assessments on a Mobile Stroke Unit: Protocol for a Prospective Open-Label Blinded End-Point Randomized Controlled Trial
Journal Title
Journal of the American Heart Association
Publication Type
Oct 18 epub ahead of priint
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Mobile stroke units have been shown to deliver faster patient care and improve clinical outcomes. However, costs associated with staffing limit their use to densely populated cities. Using the Melbourne mobile stroke unit, we aim to evaluate the safety, timeliness, and resource efficiency of a telemedicine model, where the neurologist assesses a patient remotely, via telemedicine, compared with an onboard neurologist model. We hypothesize that, without compromising patient safety, the telemedicine model will provide timely care and superior resource efficiency. METHODS: Using a prospective, randomized, blinded end-point controlled design, 270 participants consecutively assessed on the Melbourne mobile stroke unit over ≈12 months will be assigned into 2 arms: (1) telemedicine neurologist assessment (intervention) versus (2) onboard assessment (comparator). Enrollment is based on prospectively designated randomized days of neurologist review onboard versus telemedicine. The primary outcome will be the odds that a randomly selected participant in the telemedicine arm will have a better outcome than a randomly selected participant in the onboard arm, measured using a desirability-of-outcome ranking, an outcome measure that includes, in order of importance: (1) safety, (2) scene-to-treatment-decision time metrics, and (3) resource usage. All participants within each arm will be compared with those in the other, resulting in a "win/tie/loss" distribution for telemedicine compared with the onboard model. CONCLUSIONS: The study will establish whether use of a telemedicine neurologist delivers superior resource efficiency without compromising patient care. This would enable the broader use of mobile stroke units, particularly relevant to regions with limited access to neurologists, thus improving equity in access to time-critical, lifesaving stroke care. REGISTRATION: URL: clinicaltrials.gov; Unique Identifier: NCT05991310.
Publisher
AHA
Keywords
mobile stroke unit; prehospital; stroke; telemedicine; trial design
Research Division(s)
Population Health And Immunity
PubMed ID
39424402
Open Access at Publisher's Site
https://doi.org/10.1161/JAHA.124.036856
Terms of Use/Rights Notice
Refer to copyright notice on published article.


Creation Date: 2024-10-25 10:49:29
Last Modified: 2024-10-25 10:49:38
An error has occurred. This application may no longer respond until reloaded. Reload 🗙