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Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative Study Clinical Trial
Hospital re-admissions in relation to acute stroke unit care versus conventional care in elderly patients the first year after stroke: the Göteborg 70+ Stroke study.
- Lisbeth Claesson, Gunilla Gosman-Hedström, Björn Fagerberg, and Christian Blomstrand.
- The Sahlgrenska Academy of Göteborg University, Institute of Clinical Neuroscience, Göteborg University, Sweden. licl@neuro.gu.se
- Age Ageing. 2003 Jan 1; 32 (1): 109-13.
Backgroundre-hospitalisation after discharge following index stroke varies over time and with age and comorbidity. There is little knowledge about whether stroke unit care reduces the need of re-admissions.Objectivesto examine whether stroke unit care as compared with care in general medical wards was associated with fewer re-hospitalisations for conditions judged to be secondary to acute stroke and to identify the influence of stroke severity on re-admission rates.Designwe conducted a one-year randomised study to compare the outcome of treatment at an acute stroke unit in a care continuum with the outcome of treatment at general medical wards.Settingsacute and geriatric hospitals in Göteborg, Sweden.Subjects216 elderly patients aged >or=70 years discharged to their own homes or to institutionalised living after index stroke.Methodscomparison of comorbidity classified according to Charlson's morbidity index, re-admission rates, length of hospital stay, number of re-admissions and diagnoses between a group treated at a stroke unit and a group treated at general wards.Resultsthe re-admission rates, length of hospital stay and causes of re-admissions did not differ between the two groups. Complications related to the damage to the brain and concomitant heart disease were the most common causes of re-admissions in both groups. Index stroke severity did not influence the re-admission rates.Conclusionsre-admissions for conditions judged to be secondary to acute stroke were equal in the two groups in this prospective study.
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