Clinical challenge East Kent Stroke services admit 1,200 stroke patients per year, providing 24 hour acute stroke care to a population of 800,000 in South East England. Historically this was provided at two smaller Acute Stroke Centres (ASCs), with 600 patients each/yr that were co-located with Emergency Departments (ED) at William Harvey Hospital and Queen Elizabeth Queen Mother. The units struggled with poor performance for over 5 years, achieving overall SSNAP ratings of C-D. During the COVID-19 pandemic, there was an urgent need to generate additional acute medical beds at the two ED hospital sites to care for COVID patients. Solution The two ASCs were merged into a larger ASC and temporarily relocated onto a non-ED acute hospital site at Kent and Canterbury Hospital. This site had an ITU and access to 24/7 CT imaging, 14hr/day access to MRI and 24/7 middle grade junior doctor cover. It was imperative to ensure the early and correct identification of stroke patients to be transferred to the new ASC, given it did not have an ED and was further away than the local ED for â…” of patients. Innovations introduced:
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Sentinel Stroke National Audit ProgrammeKings College LondonAddison HouseGuy's CampusLondonSE1 1UL
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0116 464 9901ssnap@kcl.ac.uk
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