Mat Reeves
Michigan State University
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Stroke | 2005
Mat Reeves; S. Arora; Joseph P. Broderick; Michael R. Frankel; J. P. Heinrich; Susan Hickenbottom; Karp H; Kenneth A. LaBresh; Ann Malarcher; George A. Mensah; C. J. Moomaw; Lee H. Schwamm; Paul S. Weiss
Background and Purpose— The Paul Coverdell National Acute Stroke Registry is being developed to improve the quality of acute stroke care. This article describes key features of acute stroke care from 4 prototype registries in Georgia (Ga), Massachusetts (Mass), Michigan (Mich), and Ohio. Methods— Each prototype developed its own sampling scheme to obtain a representative sample of hospitals. Acute stroke admissions were identified using prospective (Mass, Mich) or retrospective (Ga, Ohio) methods. All prototypes used a common set of case definitions and data elements. Weighted site-specific frequencies were generated for each outcome. Results— A total of 6867 admissions from 98 hospitals were included; the majority were ischemic strokes (range, 52% to 70%) with transient ischemic attack and intracerebral hemorrhage comprising the bulk of the remainder. Between 19% and 26% of admissions were younger than age 60 years, and between 52% and 58% were female. Black subjects varied from 7.1% (Mich) to 30.6% (Ga). Between 20% and 25% of admissions arrived at the emergency department within 3 hours of onset. Treatment with recombinant tissue plasminogen activator (rtPA) was administered to between 3.0% (Ga) and 8.5% (Mass) of ischemic stroke admissions. Of 118 subjects treated with intravenous rtPA, <20% received it within 60 minutes of arrival. Compliance with secondary prevention practices was poorest for smoking cessation counseling and best for antithrombotics. Conclusions— A minority of acute stroke patients are treated according to established guidelines. Quality improvement interventions, targeted primarily at the health care systems level, are needed to improve acute stroke care in the United States.
Neurology | 2009
Eric E. Smith; Li Liang; Adrian F. Hernandez; Mat Reeves; Christopher P. Cannon; G.C. Fonarow; Lee H. Schwamm
Objective: Little is known about in-hospital care for hemorrhagic stroke. We examined quality of care in intracerebral hemorrhage (ICH) and subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH) admissions in the national Get With The Guidelines–Stroke (GWTG-Stroke) database, and compared them to ischemic stroke (IS) or TIA admissions. Methods: Between April 1, 2003, and December 30, 2007, 905 hospitals contributed 479,284 consecutive stroke and TIA admissions. The proportions receiving each quality of care measure were calculated by dividing the total number of patients receiving the intervention by the total number of patients eligible for the intervention, excluding ineligible patients or those with contraindications to treatment. Logistic regression models were used to determine associations between measure compliance and stroke subtype, controlling for patient and hospital characteristics. Results: Stroke subtypes were 61.7% IS, 23.8% TIA, 11.1% ICH, and 3.5% SAH. Performance on care measures was generally lower in ICH and SAH compared to IS/TIA, including guideline-recommended measures for deep venous thrombosis (DVT) prevention (for ICH) and smoking cessation (for SAH) (multivariable-adjusted p < 0.001 for all comparisons). Exceptions were that ICH patients were more likely than IS/TIA to have door-to-CT times <25 minutes (multivariable-adjusted p < 0.001) and to undergo dysphagia screening (multivariable-adjusted p < 0.001). Time spent in the GWTG-Stroke program was associated with improvements in many measures of care for ICH and SAH patients, including DVT prevention and smoking cessation therapy (multivariable-adjusted p < 0.001). Conclusions: Many hospital-based acute care and prevention measures are underutilized in intracerebral hemorrhage and subarachnoid hemorrhage compared to ischemic stroke /TIA. Duration of Get With The Guidelines–Stroke participation is associated with improving quality of care for hemorrhagic stroke.
Neurology | 2017
Seemant Chaturvedi; Susan Ofner; Fitsum Baye; Laura J. Myers; Mike Phipps; Jason J. Sico; Teresa M. Damush; Edward J. Miech; Mat Reeves; Jason Johanning; Linda S. Williams; Greg Arling; Eric M. Cheng; Zhangsheng Yu; Dawn M. Bravata
Background: Use of MRI with diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI) can identify infarcts in 30%–50% of patients with TIA. Previous guidelines have indicated that MRI-DWI is the preferred imaging modality for patients with TIA. We assessed the frequency of MRI utilization and predictors of MRI performance. Methods: A review of TIA and minor stroke patients evaluated at Veterans Affairs hospitals was conducted with regard to medical history, use of diagnostic imaging within 2 days of presentation, and in-hospital care variables. Chart abstraction was performed in a subset of hospitals to assess clinical variables not available in the administrative data. Results: A total of 7,889 patients with TIA/minor stroke were included. Overall, 6,694 patients (84.9%) had CT or MRI, with 3,396/6,694 (50.7%) having MRI. Variables that were associated with increased odds of CT performance were age >80 years, prior stroke, history of atrial fibrillation, heart failure, coronary artery disease, anxiety, and low hospital complexity, while blood pressure >140/90 mm Hg and high hospital complexity were associated with increased likelihood of MRI. Diplopia (87% had MRI, p = 0.03), neurologic consultation on the day of presentation (73% had MRI, p < 0.0001), and symptom duration of >6 hours (74% had MRI, p = 0.0009) were associated with MRI performance. Conclusions: Within a national health system, about 40% of patients with TIA/minor stroke had MRI performed within 2 days. Performance of MRI appeared to be influenced by several patient and facility-level variables, suggesting that there has been partial acceptance of the previous guideline that endorsed MRI for patients with TIA.
Journal of the American Heart Association | 2017
Paul A. Heidenreich; Xin Zhao; Adrian F. Hernandez; Lee H. Schwamm; Eric E. Smith; Mat Reeves; Eric D. Peterson; Gregg C. Fonarow
Background In 2009, the Get With The Guidelines‐Stroke (GWTG‐Stroke) program offered additional recognition if hospitals performed well on certain stroke quality measures. We sought to determine whether quality of care for all hospitals participating in GWTG‐Stroke improved with this expanded recognition program. Methods and Results We examined hospital‐level performance on 6 quality of care (process) measures and 1 defect‐free composite quality measure for stroke following expansion of the existing performance measure recognition program. Compliance with all measures improved following launch of the expanded program, and this rate increased significantly for all 9 measures. When evaluated as the relative rate of increase in use over time, process improvement slowed significantly (P<0.05) following launch of the program for 2 measures, and accelerated significantly for 1 measure. However, when evaluated as a gap in care, the decrease in the quality gap was greater following launch of the program for 5 of 6 (83%) measures. There was no evidence that other processes of stroke care suffered as the result of the increase in measures and expanded recognition program. Conclusions While care for stroke continues to improve in this country, expanded hospital process performance recognition had mixed results in accelerating this improvement. However, the quality gap continues to shrink among those participating in provider performance programs.
Academic Emergency Medicine | 2004
Earl J. Reisdorff; Dale J. Carlson; Mat Reeves; Gregory Walker; Oliver W. Hayes; Brian Reynolds
Archive | 2005
Kenneth A. LaBresh; Lee H. Schwamm; D Albright; Michael R. Frankel; Scott E. Kasner; I Katzen; A Malek; Mat Reeves
Stroke | 2005
Mat Reeves; S. Arora; Joseph P. Broderick; Michael R. Frankel; J. P. Heinrich; Susan Hickenbottom; Karp H; Kenneth A. LaBresh; Ann Malarcher; George A. Mensah; C. J. Moomaw; Lee H. Schwamm; Paul S. Weiss
Stroke | 2018
Paul P. Freddolino; Sarah J. Swierenga; Amanda Toler Woodward; Nathan Lounds; Joseph Fitzgerald; Constantinos K. Coursaris; Anne K. Hughes; Michele C. Fritz; Mat Reeves
Stroke | 2017
Gregg C. Fonarow; Margueritte Cox; Eric E. Smith; Jeffrey L. Saver; Mat Reeves; Deepak L. Bhatt; Ying Xian; Adrian F. Hernandez; Eric D. Peterson; Lee H. Schwamm
Stroke | 2016
Seemant Chaturvedi; Susan Ofner; Fitsum Baye; Mike Phipps; Jason J. Sico; Teresa Damush; Edward Miech; Mat Reeves; Jason M. Johanning; Linda S. Williams; Dawn M. Bravata