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Article
Role for telemedicine in acute stroke feasibility and reliability of remote administration of the NIH stroke scale
Stroke
  • Saad Shafqat, Aga Khan University
  • Joseph C. Kvedar
  • Mary M. Guanci
  • Yuchiao Chang
  • Lee H. Schwamm
Publication Date
1-1-1999
Document Type
Article
Disciplines
Abstract

Background and Purpose: Immediate access to physicians experienced in acute stroke treatment may improve clinical outcomes in patients with acute stroke. Interactive telemedicine can make stroke specialists available to assist in the evaluation of patients at multiple urban or remote rural facilities. We tested whether interrater agreement for the NIH Stroke Scale (NIHSS), a critical component of acute stroke assessment, would persist if performed over a telemedicine link.
Methods: One bedside and 1 remote NIHSS score were independently obtained on each of 20 patients with ischemic stroke. The bedside examination was performed by a stroke neurologist at the patient’s bedside. The remote examination was performed by a second stroke neurologist through an interactive high-speed audio-video link, assisted by a nurse at the patient’s bedside. Kappa coefficients were calculated for concordance between bedside and remote scores.
Results: Remote assessments took slightly longer than bedside assessments (mean 9.70 versus 6.55 minutes,
Conclusions: The NIH Stroke Scale remains a swift and reliable clinical instrument when used over interactive video. Application of this technology can bring stroke expertise to the bedside, regardless of patient location.

Citation Information
Saad Shafqat, Joseph C. Kvedar, Mary M. Guanci, Yuchiao Chang, et al.. "Role for telemedicine in acute stroke feasibility and reliability of remote administration of the NIH stroke scale" Stroke Vol. 30 Iss. 10 (1999) p. 2141 - 2145
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/saad_shafqat/46/