Clinical patterns of acute stroke among the three health-care systems in France.

Eur J Neurol

Dijon Stroke Registry, associated to INSERM and Health Ministery, Dijon, France.

Published: September 1998

Data from 959 consecutive patients registered with the Dijon Stroke Registry were used to compare the characteristics of the patients who were admitted to the public hospital within the first days after their first stroke with those admitted to the private hospitals or who remained at home. Seven hundred and one patients (73%) were admitted to the public hospital, 185 (19%) were admitted to private hospitals and 73 (8%) remained in the community. The results show that the clinical patterns of the stroke are quite different among the three health-care systems. The clinical patterns of stroke managed in the public hospital are characterized by: a younger age (63-years-old vs, 77 and 76-years-old), earlier coma (29% vs 2.8 and 1.5%), more severe deficit (71% vs 15 and 5%), more hemorrhagic mechanism (23 vs 4.5% and 1.7%), more associated ischemic heart disease (31% vs 18 and 15%), more cardiac arrhythmia (38% vs 11 and 8%), higher case fatality rate (39% vs 8 and 2%). Therefore, we have identified three clinical patterns among the three health-care facilities. These three clinical patterns are quite different on the point of view of the clinical severity, and the associated co-morbidities. The socio-economic status is not a criteria in the choice of the health-care facility. This observed distribution is not the consequence of a voluntary policy. Copyright 1998 Lippincott Williams & Wilkins

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1046/j.1468-1331.1998.550463.xDOI Listing

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