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Ministry of Health Launches Saskatchewan Acute Stroke Pathway

Those who suffer a stroke will now be cared for quickly and efficiently with integration of a new set of protocals.

            Those who suffer a stroke will now be cared for quickly and efficiently with integration of a new set of protocals.

            With the formal launch of the Saskatchewan Acute Stroke Pathway on January 16, patients showing signs of a stroke will benefit from standardized care during the first few hours after the onset of symptoms, which can significantly improve outcomes for many patients, according to a release from the Ministry of Health.

            The pathway establishes consistent protocols for rapid, co-ordinated, high-quality care of stroke patients in all of Saskatchewan, ensuring that best practice care is available from ambulance to emergency room to hospital admission.

            “People who display symptoms of a stroke, no matter where they live in Saskatchewan, now have access to more timely and appropriate care during the first crucial hours following a stroke,” said MLA Gene Makowsky on behalf of Jim Reiter, the health minister. “Through the Acute Stroke Pathway, health care teams are working together to identify, evaluate and treat patients as quickly as possible.”

            “When dealing with stroke, we’re working against the clock,” said Dr. Michael Kelly, Saskatoon Health Region cerebrovascular surgeon. “By arriving at an accurate diagnosis quickly, we increase the chances of reducing or eliminating the sometimes debilitating damage a stroke can cause.”

            Since 2013, Dr. Kelly and a team of stroke experts have worked with health system partners to align local procedures with national standards for hyperacute stroke care, the release said. Physicians and health region staff assisted in the adoption of the Acute Stroke Pathway protocols so more patients can receive early assessment and access to acute stroke treatment.

            Pathway-based hyperacute stroke care is offered in seven primary stroke centres across the province and two tertiary stroke centres, which are located in Regina and Saskatoon.

            Dr. Kelly holds a Saskatchewan Research chair in Clinical Stroke Research, with primary funding by the Heart and Stroke Foundation and the provincially-funded Saskatchewan Health Research Foundation, in order to offer a number of improvements in stroke care provincially, nationally and internationally.

            “We are pleased that this pathway allows provincial implementation of guidelines based on the Heart and Stroke Foundation’s best-practice recommendations for hyperacute stroke care, and that Dr. Kelly’s role as research chair supported the adoption of the pathway,” said Allison Kesler, CEO of Heart and Stroke Saskatchewan.

            In 2015 and 2016, a total of 1,751 people in Saskatchewan were hospitalized for stroke. About half of all stroke patients experience some permanent or long-term disability.