Issue - meetings

Kent and Medway Stroke Review

Meeting: 28/03/2019 - Health Overview and Scrutiny Committee (Item 29)

29 Kent and Medway Stroke Review pdf icon PDF 188 KB

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Minutes:

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29.1.      The Committee considered a report about whether the decision of the Joint Committee of Clinical Commissioning Groups in relation to stroke services in Kent and Medway is in the best interest of health services in East Sussex.

29.2.      The Committee received a number of responses to its questions from the witnesses in attendance.

Number of patients affected by changes

29.3.      Ashley Scarff, Director of Commissioning Operations, HWLH CCG, confirmed that modelling by the CCGs had indicated the total number of patients in East Sussex affected by the planned changes would be approximately 50 per year. These comprise patients who currently use Pembury Hospital in Tunbridge Wells and who would in future use Eastbourne District General Hospital (EDGH).

Additional capacity at the Eastbourne District General Hospital

29.4.      Dr Adrian Bull confirmed that ESHT has modelled the likely impact of the additional patients and considers it relatively small compared to the number of patients currently served by the EDGH Hyper Acute Stroke Unit (HASU). He confirmed the additional patients could be accommodated.

Travel Times

29.5.      James Pavey explained that SECAmb is effective at identifying whether someone describing their symptoms over the phone (or the symptoms of someone else) is having a stroke. Someone suspected of having a stroke will be placed in a Category 2 response call, which has a target response time of 18 minutes. The ambulance crew will assess the patient on arrival to check that they are having a stroke and they will be then taken to the closest appropriate hospital with a stroke unit. There is a two-hour ‘call to needle’ time for patients who need to go to a stroke unit and receive thrombolysis (if it is a clot causing the stroke) and SECAmb is confident it can achieve this timescale. He added that strokes are one of the most straightforward conditions to identify clinically, which is a real advantage when determining which hospital to convey a patient to.

29.6.      James Pavey confirmed that it will depend on the individual case and will be decided on-scene, but as a general rule an ambulance would convey a patient straight to a HASU first time. An ambulance crew would not take the patient to the nearest hospital in order to have them stabilised before moving them on to a specialist centre. He explained that this was because:

  • taking patients to the nearest hospital may add further delays in treatment when transferring them on to a specialist unit; and
  • an ambulance crew can manage the straightforward medical needs of a patient with a stroke – such as keeping airways clear – on the way to a specialist unit, so this would not need to be performed at an intermediary hospital.

29.7.      He compared the conveyance straight to a HASU as analogous to other medical conditions where it is more important to go to the  ...  view the full minutes text for item 29