Rural-urban differences in emergency medical services bypass routing of stroke in North Carolina.

Abstract

Purpose

Acute stroke is a serious, time-sensitive condition requiring immediate medical attention. Emergency medical services (EMS) routing and direct transport of acute stroke patients to stroke centers improves timely access to care. This study aimed to describe EMS stroke routing and transports by rurality in North Carolina (NC).

Methods

We conducted a retrospective study using existing data on EMS transports of suspected stroke patients in NC in 2019. The primary study outcome was EMS bypass of the nearest hospital for transport to a nonnearest hospital, determined by geographic information systems (GIS) analysis. Incident addresses were geocoded to census tracts and classified as urban, suburban, or rural by Rural-Urban Commuting Area codes. We compared the frequency of bypass and estimated additional transport times by urban, suburban, and rural incident locations.

Findings

Of 3666 patients, 1884 (51%) EMS transports bypassed the nearest hospital. Bypass occurred less often for rural EMS incidents (39%) compared to those in urban (57%) and suburban (63%) tracts. The estimated additional transport time for rural bypasses of nonendovascular-capable stroke centers for endovascular-capable stroke centers was a median of 25 min (interquartile range 13-33).

Conclusions

Using GIS analysis, we found nearly half of EMS transports of suspected stroke patients in NC bypassed the nearest hospital, including noncertified hospitals and stroke centers. Bypasses occurred less often in rural areas, though incurred significantly longer transport times, compared to urban areas. These findings are important for regional stroke system planning, especially for improving rural access to acute stroke care.

Department

Description

Provenance

Subjects

Humans, Transportation of Patients, Retrospective Studies, Geographic Information Systems, Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Middle Aged, Rural Population, Urban Population, Emergency Medical Services, Health Services Accessibility, North Carolina, Female, Male, Stroke

Citation

Published Version (Please cite this version)

10.1111/jrh.12868

Publication Info

Patel, Mehul D, Srihari V Chari, Eric R Cui, Antonio R Fernandez, Arrianna Marie Planey, Edward C Jauch and James E Winslow (2025). Rural-urban differences in emergency medical services bypass routing of stroke in North Carolina. The Journal of rural health : official journal of the American Rural Health Association and the National Rural Health Care Association, 41(1). p. e12868. 10.1111/jrh.12868 Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/34162.

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Scholars@Duke

Patel

Mehul Dinesh Patel

Instructor in the Department of Emergency Medicine

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