Does an allied health transdisciplinary stroke assessment save time, improve quality of care, and save costs? Results of a pre-/post- clinical study

Author:

Martin Aleysha K1ORCID,Griffin Alison2,McCarthy Alexandra L3,Green Theresa L4,Sowa P Marcin5,Laakso E-Liisa6

Affiliation:

1. Faculty of Medicine, Mater Research Institute − University of Queensland, Mater Hospital Brisbane, Raymond Terrace, South Brisbane, QLD, Australia

2. Statistics Unit, QIMR Berghofer Medical Research Institute, Herston, QLD, Australia

3. Griffith Health Executive, Griffith University, Gold Coast Campus, Parklands Drive, Southport, QLD, Australia

4. School of Nursing, Midwifery and Social Work, The University of Queensland, Brisbane, QLD, Australia

5. Centre for the Business and Economics of Health, The University of Queensland, Brisbane, QLD, Australia

6. Allied Health, Mater Research Institute - University of Queensland, Mater Hospital Brisbane, Raymond Terrace, South Brisbane, QLD, Australia

Abstract

Purpose: Demand for stroke services is increasing. To save time and costs, stroke care could be reorganised using a transdisciplinary assessment model embracing overlapping allied health professional skills. The study compares transdisciplinary assessment to discipline-specific allied health assessment on an acute stroke unit, by evaluating assessment time, quality of care, and cost implications. Method: The pre-/post- clinical study used non-randomised groups and 3-month follow-up after hospital admission. Patients with confirmed/suspected stroke received usual discipline-specific allied health assessment (pre-implementation phase) or the novel transdisciplinary assessment (post-implementation phase). Staff/student assessment times (primary outcome) and medical record data (secondary outcomes) were collected. Time differences were estimated using multivariable linear regression controlling for confounding factors. Cost minimisation and sensitivity analyses estimated change in hospital resource use. Findings: When the transdisciplinary assessment was used ( N = 116), compared to usual assessment ( N = 63), the average time saving was 37.6 min (95% CI −47.5, −27.7; p < 0.001) for staff and 62.2 min (95% CI −74.1, −50.3; p < 0.001) for students. The median number of allied health occasions of service reduced from 8 (interquartile range 4–23) to 5 (interquartile range 3–10; p = 0.011). There were no statistically significant or clinically important changes in patient safety, outcomes or stroke guideline adherence. Improved efficiency was associated with an estimated cost saving of $379.45 per patient (probabilistic 95% CI −487.15, −271.48). Discussion and conclusion: Transdisciplinary stroke assessment has potential for reorganising allied health services to save assessment time and reduce healthcare costs. The transdisciplinary stroke assessment could be considered for implementation in other stroke services.

Funder

Queensland Health

National Health and Medical Research Council

Mater Misericordiae Ltd

University of Queensland

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Reference15 articles.

1. World Stroke Organisation. WSO global stroke fact sheet 2022, https://www.world-stroke.org/news-and-blog/news/wso-global-stroke-fact-sheet-2022 (2022, accessed 10 July 2023).

2. Stroke Foundation. Clinical guidelines for stroke management, https://informme.org.au/Guidelines/Clinical-Guidelines-for-Stroke-Management (2023, accessed 10 July 2023).

3. Transdisciplinary allied health assessment for patients with stroke: a pre-/post- mixed methods study protocol

4. It Is Time To Restructure Health Professions Scope-Of-Practice Regulations To Remove Barriers To Care

5. Allied health transdisciplinary models of care in hospital settings: A scoping review

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