Stud Health Technol Inform
May 2023
Background: The Integrated Treatment Pathway Stroke Tyrol was introduced for the care of people after an acute stroke event and includes four phases: acute prehospital care, inpatient treatment, inpatient rehabilitation and ambulatory, outpatient rehabilitation. For the 4th phase, the ambulatory rehabilitation of patients after discharge, the ICT platform "StrokeNet Tyrol" was established.
Methods: Requirements and processes along the pathway and between the interdisciplinary team were taken into account for implementation based on a modular software architecture.
The aim of our study was to assess whether a well-established federal state-wide Stroke Care Pathway delivering high quality stroke care can cope with the COVID-19 pandemic and associated measures to contain the virus spread. The retrospective analysis is based on a prospective, quality-controlled, population-based registry of all stroke patients in the Tyrol, a federal state of Austria and one of the early hot-spots of COVID-19 in Europe. Patient characteristics, pre-hospital management, intra-hospital management and post-hospital were analysed.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Recent advances in acute stroke therapy have been shown to improve clinical outcome and therefore reduce long-term disability. Acute therapy procedures in stroke have a limited time frame after onset of symptoms; thus, rapid emergency management is critical. The Tyrolean Stroke Pathway was developed to optimize the entire treatment pathway from stroke onset to outpatient rehabilitation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFStud Health Technol Inform
September 2019
Background: Stroke is one of third most common causes of death and the main cause for permanent disabilities. The Tyrol Stroke Pathway covers, all steps from stroke onset to outpatient rehabilitation.
Objectives: The main objective of this paper is to describe how the paper-based documentation in the outpatient rehabilitation can be implemented in an eHealth service for integrated care.
Background: Intravenous thrombolysis for ischaemic stroke remains underused worldwide. We aimed to assess whether our statewide comprehensive stroke management programme would improve thrombolysis use and clinical outcome in patients.
Methods: In 2008-09, we designed the Tyrol Stroke Pathway, which provided information campaigns for the public and standardised the entire treatment pathway from stroke onset to outpatient rehabilitation.