Measurement of quality of stroke care with national electronic health records: a prospective cohort study during and after the COVID-19 pandemic
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Peer-reviewed
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Abstract
Objectives
To evaluate the value of linked electronic health records (EHRs) for measuring stroke care quality in England before and after the COVID-19 pandemic, focusing on metrics not routinely captured: stroke incidence, dispensing of secondary prevention medications and a proxy of disability—time spent at home after stroke (‘home-time’).
Design
Prospective cohort study using national linked datasets.
Setting
England-wide health data linkage including the Sentinel Stroke National Audit Programme (SSNAP), primary and secondary care, dispensed medications and mortality records, accessed via National Health Service (NHS) England’s Secure Data Environment.
Participants
425 675 adults with a first stroke between 1 January 2020 and 31 December 2023; data were available for 304 210 in primary care, 279 825 in hospital admissions, 220 470 in SSNAP and 59 465 in death records.
Main outcome measures
Annual stroke incidence; first-year medication dispensing rates for antiplatelets, anticoagulants, antihypertensives and lipid-lowering agents (with a 1-month washout period) and home-time at 180 days post stroke.
Results
Stroke ascertainment was highest when combining all sources, with 10.8% of non-fatal ischaemic strokes recorded exclusively in primary care and 19.4% of fatal strokes identified solely through death records. Standardised annual stroke incidence rose from 227.6 (95% CI 226.1 to 229.0) to 244.8 (95% CI 243.4 to 246.3) per 100 000 over the study period including the COVID-19 pandemic. During the COVID-19 lockdown, non-fatal stroke recordings decreased while stroke-related deaths rose, indicating that recording quality was sensitive to shifts in healthcare-seeking behaviour during the pandemic. Among people with ischaemic stroke, 89.1% received an antiplatelet or anticoagulant, 44.5% an antihypertensive and 80.5% a lipid-lowering therapy. For haemorrhagic stroke, these proportions were: for anticoagulants 13.5%, antiplatelets 13.2%, antihypertensives 46.6% and lipid lowering 41.1%. Medication dispensing for stroke prevention declined with increasing age and comorbidity, but varied little by ethnicity, region or pandemic period. Mean home-time within 180 days of stroke was 166.6 (95% CI 166.4 to 166) days, decreasing with greater age (141.4 days for 90 years or older (95% CI 140.7 to 142.1)), deprivation (166.4 days (95% CI 166.1 to 166.6) for most deprived quintile) and stroke severity (137.4 days for National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale (NIHSS) score on arrival over 22 (95% CI 135.8 to 139.1)) and increasing with years from the COVID-19 pandemic 2023 (169.3 days (95% CI 169.0 to 169.5) vs 2020 164.4 days (95% CI 164.1 to 164.7)).
Conclusions
Standardised stroke incidence increased significantly over the study period, highlighting a growing public health burden that persisted despite disruptions due to the pandemic although variation in case ascertainment and stroke coding practices was observed. While secondary prevention coverage for antiplatelets and lipids was high, lower rates of dispensing of antihypertensives, particularly in older and comorbid populations, potentially signal a target for improvement. Home-time represents a sensitive, person-centred outcome that exposes disparities linked to socioeconomic deprivation and clinical severity that can be used to enhance routine stroke audits. These findings justify the expansion of linked EHR infrastructure and the modernisation of governance frameworks to enable the longitudinal evaluation of care quality beyond the COVID-19 era.
Description
Peer reviewed: True
Acknowledgements: This study made use of de-identified data held in NHS England’s SDE service for England and made available via the BHF Data Science Centre’s CVD-COVID-UK/COVID-IMPACT consortium. This work used data provided by patients and collected by the NHS as part of their care and support. We would also like to acknowledge all data providers who make health relevant data available for research.
Publication status: Published
Funder: NHS Wales
Funder: NHS England
Funder: HDRUK
Funder: The Stroke Association
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Journal Title
BMJ Open
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Journal ISSN
2044-6055
2044-6055
2044-6055
Volume Title
16
Publisher
BMJ
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Rights and licensing
Except where otherwised noted, this item's license is described as https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
Sponsorship
British Heart Foundation (SP/19/3/34678)

