Emergency medical services utilization in acute stroke in Qatar - an observational cohort study

Bhutta, Zain A., Akhtar, Naveed, Harris, Tim, Castren, Maaret, Imam, Yahia, Pathan, Sameer A., Alinier, Guillaume, Kamran, Saadat, Cameron, Peter A. and Puolakka, Tuukka (2025) Emergency medical services utilization in acute stroke in Qatar - an observational cohort study. International Journal of Emergency Medicine, 18 (1): 64. pp. 1-10. ISSN 1865-1372
Copy

Introduction: Timely recanalization improves long-term outcomes in acute ischemic stroke (IS) patients, but most patients present outside the therapeutic window. Emergency Medical Services (EMS) can reduce pre-hospital delay and increase the likelihood of recanalization. We aim to determine the characteristic variations amongst suspected acute stroke patients using EMS. Methods: This retrospective observational study included all suspected acute stroke patients admitted to a national tertiary care hospital in Qatar from January 2014 to September 2020. We evaluated demographics, clinical features, treatment impact, and associated factors in EMS versus non-EMS transported groups. Results: During the study period, 11,892 patients presented with suspected stroke. Of these, 65.1% used EMS (EMS group) for transportation to the hospital. Median age was comparable between EMS and non-EMS group [52 years; IQR 43–63 vs. 43–62, p < 0.05]. Male to female ratio was 3:1. EMS use in the Qatari population (59.2%) was relatively low. Patients with hemorrhagic stroke (82.4%) had significantly higher EMS use as compared to IS (65.7%) and cerebral venous thrombosis (64.7%); p < 0.001. Symptom onset to ED presentation time was lower in EMS users, with 41.0% arriving within 4.5 h vs. 24.3% in the non-EMS transported group (p < 0.05). Patients with unilateral weakness (66.4%), aphasia (78.2%), neglect (78.2%), dysarthria (68.4%), loss of consciousness (83.3%), and seizures (83.9%) were more likely to use EMS than alternative modes of transportation. Patients attending via EMS had higher rates of thrombolysis than others (82.4% vs. 17.6%; p < 0.001) and a shorter door-to-needle time (56.4 ± 38.2 min vs. 75.7 ± 43.8 min; p < 0.001). Conclusion: EMS utilization in acute stroke patients was high and was associated with rapid and higher rates of therapeutic intervention. However, younger age, Arab ethnicity, and less obvious stroke symptoms were associated with lower EMS use, emphasizing the need for targeted public health interventions to improve EMS activations.


picture_as_pdf
12245_2025_Article_877.pdf
subject
Published Version
Available under Creative Commons: BY 4.0

View Download

Atom BibTeX OpenURL ContextObject in Span OpenURL ContextObject Dublin Core MPEG-21 DIDL Data Cite XML EndNote HTML Citation METS MODS RIOXX2 XML Reference Manager Refer ASCII Citation
Export

Downloads