Professional Documents
Culture Documents
CBC News Posted: Mar 06, 2017 12:57 PM MT Last Updated: Mar 06, 2017 5:26 PM MT
Alberta's stroke treatment centres are now among the fastest in the world in giving patients a clot-busting
drug that can save lives, Alberta Health Services said Monday.
A year-long quality improvement initiative has seen the average "door-to-needle" time it takes from a
patient's arrival at hospital to being diagnosed with stroke and injected with tPA cut nearly in half, from 70
minutes to 36 minutes.
In a news release Monday, AHS said an improvement of that degree and across such a large
geographical area has not been reported anywhere in the world.
A similar effort in the United States saw average door-to-needle times in participating hospitals drop from
74 minutes to 59.
"For many years now, the accepted benchmark has been to treat patients within 60 minutes of their arrival
at hospital," said Dr. Michael Hill, a Calgary-based stroke neurologist.
"But we know that by doing better, we can improve outcomes for patients by preventing or limiting long-
term disabilities. And when we can give stroke patients better chances to fully recover, we also eliminate
potential downstream costs to the health system."
Hill is principal investigator in a quality improvement and research program, funded by Alberta Innovates,
called QuICR, Quality Improvement & Clinical Research Alberta Stroke Program.
During an ischemic stroke, in which blood supply to the brain is blocked, about two million brain cells die
every minute and about 12 kilometres of neural connections are lost.
The Grey Nuns currently holds the provincial record with the fastest door-to-needle time six minutes.
"Improvements like this are life-changing for Albertans, and an example of the teamwork and innovative
thinking that are helping to strengthen our health system to ensure all Albertans have the care they need
when they need it," said Health Minister Sarah Hoffman.
Florence Deschamps suffered a stroke in 2016 at her home in Pigeon Lake, Alta.
From her arrival at the Grey Nuns hospital in Edmonton until she was administered the clot-busting drug
tPA took 26 minutes.
"I think that it is a miracle that I am alive today," Deschamps said Monday. "I am still not the way that I
used to be, but I am better."
She was admitted to the Grey Nuns hospital and given tPA as part of her treatment.
"I have my quality of life back but I feel that I got even more back" said Shiach.
"Now when I am doing something as simple with my kids as playing a game of cards or sitting and
cuddling and reading a story ...I just remember how close I came to losing all of that."
Face: is it drooping?
Explore CBC
CBC Home
TV
Radio
News
Sports
Music
Life
Arts
Kids
Local
Documentaries
Comedy
Books
Parents
Indigenous
Digital Archives
Games
Contests
Site Map
Stay Connected
Apps
RSS
Podcasts
Corporate Info
Public Appearances
Commercial Services
Terms of Use
Privacy Policy
CBC Shop
Help
Contact Us
Jobs
Renting Facilities