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Equitable Access to Stroke Care in Canada – The Geographic Conundrum

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 February 2020

Asif Butt
Affiliation:
Fellow Cerebrovascular Diseases/Stroke, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Canada
Thomas Jeerakathil*
Affiliation:
Division of Neurology, Department of Medicine, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Canada
*
Correspondence to: Thomas Jeerakathil, Neurology/Medicine, University of Alberta, 7-112G; 11350 – 83rd Avenue, Edmonton, AB T6G 2G3, Canada. Email: [email protected]
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Abstract

Type
Editorial
Copyright
© 2020 The Canadian Journal of Neurological Sciences Inc.

Healthcare systems are shaped to best serve the subject population, and the geospatial distribution of the population has an impact on healthcare delivery. The Canadian perspective on stroke care access differs from most of the developed world due to a vast geographic area with low population density. Only four people live per square kilometer of Canada compared to 36 in the USA and 237 in Germany.1 Although more than 80% of Canadians now live in metropolitan or urban centers, rural is still the way of life for every fifth Canadian. Furthermore, 66% of citizens live within 100 km from the Canada–US border with 33% scattered over 96% of colossal Canada.2 The relative concentration of population hubs near the southern border may be good for stroke care access to the majority but makes the other 33% even more vulnerable. Despite a gradual trend toward urbanization resulting in an increased share of the non-rural population overtime in relative terms, the absolute number of people living rurally is still increasing.3

Stroke care must be appropriate, safe, efficient, acceptable, accessible, and effective.4 These quality benchmarks are easier to achieve in urban centers, but severe inequalities may appear in rural communities. Lack of access to preventative, restorative, and rehabilitative services in rural Canada can render care non-equitable. Delayed delivery of diagnostic and therapeutic stroke interventions in this time-sensitive disease negatively impacts patient outcomes resulting in care which is neither efficient nor very effective.

In this issue of the Canadian Journal of Neurological Sciences, Kapral et al. explored access to stroke care in rural Ontario communities.Reference Kapral, Hall and Gozdyra5 They defined rural as a community with less than 10,000 inhabitants and calculated the total rural population in Ontario as approximately 1.5 million strong. They estimated stroke care access by transport times analyzed for within 30, 60, and 240 min of driving time at posted speeds. Access to stroke care services, including neuroimaging, thrombolysis, endovascular thrombectomy (EVT), stroke unit care, stroke prevention clinics, and inpatient rehabilitation facilities, was assessed.

Their data showed that over 90% of rural residents lived within 240 min of drive time for most stroke care services but EVT. They found that EVT access drops rapidly from 83.9% at 240 min to 32.1% at 60 min and only 3.3% at less than 30 min drive. The authors conclude that access to stroke care across rural Ontario communities is reassuringly good with exception of EVT. However, the authors also found a striking access discrepancy between rural residents of northern and southern Ontario across multiple domains of stroke care. For example, almost a third of northern Ontario residents were more than 4 h from MRI, stroke unit care, and inpatient rehabilitation. Worse still, greater than two thirds were more than 4 h from EVT. In comparison, no southern Ontario rural residents lived so far from any stroke services. Overall their work is novel in the sense that rural stroke care access has not been previously investigated exclusively.

The data are still somewhat heartening for rural Ontario as a whole, but the picture may not be as rosy across the country. Although 19% of Canadians lived in a rural area in 2011, the Atlantic provinces and the territories had 40–50% of their population living rurally. Rural populations in Saskatchewan and Manitoba were also well above the national average. In fact, Ontario and British Columbia are the most urbanized provinces with a rural share of 14% each.6 Stroke care services access will likely fall short of the Ontario average in multiple domains if a similar analysis was conducted for provinces and territories with higher rural proportions and a less organized stroke system.

Although EVT is only one of many stroke care services analyzed in the paper by Kapral et al., it deserves a special mention here. It is an effective restorative intervention for acute large vessel occlusion with the number needed to treat to produce a good outcome as low as 2–3.Reference Goyal, Menon and van Zwam7 EVT access has implications on systems of stroke care and patient outcomes. Expansion of the therapeutic window for EVT from 6 to 24 hReference Boulanger, Lindsay and Gubitz8 has made it an uphill task to timely acquire multimodal neuroimaging (including CT angiography and CT perfusion) for patient selection and has intensified the debate surrounding the best way to triage acute stroke transport between primary and comprehensive stroke centers (CSCs). From a rural perspective, determination of EVT eligibility adds the expectation of improved access to these imaging modalities at primary stroke centers with round the clock radiology and tele-stroke network support. Downstream, EVT necessitates stroke observation unit or intensive care unit admission and significantly alters patient care needs. The number of EVTs being performed is on the rise since the publication of thrombectomy trials in 2015 and in the USA, case volumes nearly doubled.Reference Smith, Saver and Cox9 This means CSCs are likely to increase their share in acute phase management. Remote and newly minted CSCs, such as those in northern Ontario, will require adequate funding by the health system and adequate staffing by qualified and available neuro-interventionalists as they attempt to provide their populations access to this critical service. Creativity will be required to come up with a physician model that will support these low volume centers while maintaining practitioner competence and site efficiency. Unfortunately, endovascular treatment services are not even available in Yukon Territory, Northwest Territories, or Nunavut.Reference Eswaradass, Swartz and Rosen10 Many other aspects of organized stroke care may also be lacking in these places in which more than 100,000 Canadians abide permanently, many in rural areas.11

The results of the current paper suggest that 77% of rural Ontarians have access to inpatient stroke rehabilitation services within 60 min of drive time. However, owing to capacity constraints many patients may not qualify for such inpatient care and are rather called for therapy sessions on various schedules. An hour’s drive to and from a rehabilitation facility many times each week can result in prohibitive exhaustion for the caregivers and patients. Innovative strategies including early supportive discharge programs and investment in tele-rehabilitation services could bridge such gaps.Reference Langhorne and Baylan12

Although heavily urbanized, Ontario is home to 25% of the total rural Canadian populace. The current study not only clearly depicts the strengths of the system of stroke care in Ontario but also highlights opportunities to further improve access. Provincial systems of stroke care must continue to evolve to break down not just urban and rural discrepancies in access to care but discrepancies within rural areas themselves.

Disclosures

The authors have indicated they have no relevant conflicts of interest to disclose.

Statement of Authorship

All authors contributed equally to this manuscript.

References

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