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Stroke nurses cut door-to-needle time and were linked to lower stroke mortality in a meta-analysis

Journal of Stroke and Cerebrovascular Diseases (PubMed)Feb 1, 2025

AI-summarized from the linked source. Educational brief, not medical advice.

Brief summary

A systematic review and meta-analysis found that adding a dedicated stroke nurse to acute stroke teams was associated with faster door-to-needle time and lower three-month mortality.

What NurseJet pulled from the source

Pooling eight studies, stroke nurse involvement was associated with a shorter door-to-needle time (about 20 minutes faster), lower three-month mortality (OR 0.56), better functional outcomes (OR 1.33), and higher thrombolysis rates (OR 1.52). Length of hospital stay was comparable with or without a stroke nurse.

Why this matters for nurses

In acute ischemic stroke, time is brain, and door-to-needle time depends heavily on coordinated nursing at the front of the pathway. This may matter for nurses because it quantifies how a dedicated stroke-nurse role is associated with faster thrombolysis and lower mortality.

Bedside takeaway

Worth knowing that adding a dedicated stroke nurse was associated with roughly 20 minutes faster door-to-needle time, higher thrombolysis rates, and lower three-month mortality.

Explain this for my unit

Key takeaways

  • Across eight studies, stroke nurse involvement was linked to a roughly 20-minute shorter door-to-needle time.
  • Three-month mortality was lower (OR 0.56) and good functional outcomes more likely (OR 1.33).
  • Intravenous thrombolysis rates increased (OR 1.52).
  • Length of hospital stay was similar with or without a stroke nurse.

Practice implications

  • Support streamlined stroke-nurse workflows that compress door-to-needle steps such as rapid assessment, imaging coordination, and thrombolysis setup, use BE-FAST recognition with prompt pathway activation, and advocate for a defined stroke-nurse role where one does not exist.

Limitations & cautions

  • Only eight studies were pooled, with variation in stroke systems and possible bias. These are associations from observational and trial data, not proof that the nurse role alone causes the outcomes.
  • AI-summarized from the linked source. Review the original article before applying to practice.

Citations

Exact source links

Public citations are filtered to exact credible source pages. Homepage-only or invalid links stay in admin review and are not shown here.

Journal of Stroke and Cerebrovascular Diseases (PubMed)

Journal of Stroke and Cerebrovascular Diseases (PubMed). Effects of stroke nurse-led acute stroke management on treatment time benchmarks, intravenous thrombolysis rates, and patient outcomes: A systematic review and meta-analysis.

Open original source

https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/39740694/

Professional education only

This summary does not replace clinical judgment, facility policy, provider orders, or official guidelines. Verify practice changes against the original source and local protocol.

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