1 results match your criteria: "New York University (L.J.B.).[Affiliation]"
Stroke
November 2014
From the Department of Neurology (M.T.M.), Center for Clinical Epidemiology and Biostatistics (D.J.W., J.R., C.C.B., B.G.C.), Leonard Davis Institute of Health Economics (D.J.W., C.C.B., B.G.C.), and Department of Emergency Medicine, School of Medicine (B.G.C.), University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia; Department of Emergency Medicine, University of Southern California, Los Angeles (A.B.); School of Medicine, Duke University, Durham, NC (C.S.W.); Department of Epidemiology, School of Public Health, University of Alabama at Birmingham, Birmingham (K.C.A.); Health Services and Outcomes Research Center for Outcome and Effectiveness Research and Education, University of Alabama at Birmingham (K.C.A.); and Department of Neurology, New York University (L.J.B.).
Background And Purpose: We examine whether the proportion of the US population with ≤60 minute access to Primary Stroke Centers (PSCs) varies based on geographic and demographic factors.
Methods: Population level access to PSCs within 60 minutes was estimated using validated models of prehospital time accounting for critical prehospital time intervals and existing road networks. We examined the association between geographic factors, demographic factors, and access to care.