Presse Med
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Telemedicine covers different fields going from teleconsultation to tele expertise. Thanks to different national and international studies, telemedicine applied to stroke (telestroke) should be considered as reliable, sure and efficient. ⋯ Telestroke can be used at each stage of stroke and every kind of stroke can benefit this technic. The main limitation is the lack of specific financial retribution.
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Cerebral MRI with angio-MR are more effective than CT scan for selecting patients with ischemic stroke for thrombolysis. The use of cerebral MRI has to be available 24h a day and everyday as a standardized emergency procedure. ⋯ In acute ischemic stroke, imaging that shows the collateral circulation within the hypoperfusion area has to be used to estimate the potential of therapeutic revascularization. When there are contraindications for intravenous thrombolysis, the endovascular approach must be argued individually by neurologists and neurointerventionalists together.
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Since their creation in 2005 in France, mobile mental health outreach teams (EMPP) have been working to improve the health of the homeless who, for 30 to 50% of them, present severe mental disorders. Their missions are defined by ministerial circular's specifications. Few studies have been undertaken in France to analyze the practices of these teams' professionals, nor the characteristics of the populations with whom they are involved. The EMPP described in this paper had in 2010 a greater staff than other French EMPPs. It has 15 full-time staff, including four doctors (two psychiatrists, one GP, one house physician), two nurses, two educators, one social worker, three peer-workers, one secretary and two coordinators. The article analyzes the way of support developed within the range of EMPP's missions defined by the ministerial circular. ⋯ The strategies developed by this Mobile Health Outreach Team ensure local community medical, psychiatric and social care for "hard to reach" people. The results confirm the interest of the link between the street work, the hospital and the halfway home, both as a living facility and an alternative to hospitalization. They suggest the importance of a critical minimum size for these EMPP that allows them a street work with doctors providing guidance. The presence of a GP is another welcome development because of the severity and the entanglement of somatic and psychiatric problems of these populations.