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  Volume 
          3: 
          No. 4, October 2006 
TOOLS & TECHNIQUESThe Great Lakes Regional Stroke Network Experience
Angela Bray Hedworth, MS, CHES, RHEd, Cassidy S. Smith, MPH
Suggested citation for this article: Hedworth AB, Smith CS.
  The Great Lakes Regional Stroke Network experience. Prev Chronic Dis [serial
  online] 2006 Oct [date cited]. Available from: http://www.cdc.gov/pcd/issues/2006/oct/06_0026.htm.
 AbstractStroke is a leading cause of disability and the third leading cause of
  death among adults in the United States and in the Great Lakes states of
  Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, Minnesota, Ohio, and Wisconsin. The Great Lakes
  Regional Stroke Network was created to enhance collaboration and coordination
  among the Great Lakes states to reduce the burden of stroke and stroke-related disparities 
	associated with race, sex, and geography.
  Three priorities were identified for reducing the effects of stroke in the
  Great Lakes region: 1) build epidemiologic capacity to improve stroke
  prevention and control efforts, 2) facilitate systems-level changes and 
	collaborative efforts to improve acute stroke care and rehabilitation, and 
	3) promote awareness of the warning signs of stroke and the need to call 
	911. The
  Great Lakes Regional Stroke Network has work groups in the areas of
  epidemiology and surveillance, health care quality improvement, and public
  education. These groups recommend initiatives to states for their efforts
  to reduce the effects of stroke within the Great Lakes region. Examples of
  recommended initiatives include identifying and prioritizing state research
  evaluation needs for stroke, conducting a stroke education media campaign, and
  developing a statewide emergency medical services protocol for stroke. Back to top IntroductionStroke is the third leading cause of death in the United States and a
  leading cause of long-term disability (1). In the United States there are approximately
  4.5 million stroke survivors (2), and according to the American Stroke
  Association (ASA), there are approximately 500,000 new strokes per year. 
  On average, someone has a stroke every 45 seconds, and someone dies of
  a stroke about every 3 minutes. One third of strokes occur in people younger
  than 65 years (3). In an article in Stroke, Elkins and Johnston predict
  stroke deaths will increase 98% between 2002 and 2032 (4). In 2004, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) funded a
  regional stroke network comprising the following Great Lakes states: Illinois,
  Indiana, Michigan, Minnesota, Ohio, and Wisconsin. One of the first tasks for the Great Lakes Regional
  Stroke Network (GLRSN) was to develop a document 
	detailing stroke statistics for the Great Lakes region. In this area, 
	stroke is a leading cause of long-term adult disability, is the third 
	leading cause of death among adults, and accounted for 25,000 deaths, or 
	5.7% of all deaths, in 2002 (5). According to estimates from the Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System
  (BRFSS) and other state-administered surveys, more than 880,000 people in the
  Great Lakes region live with the effects of stroke. In the Great Lakes
  region in 2002, the age-adjusted stroke mortality rate per 100,000 people
  ranged from 51.3 in Minnesota to 60.1 in Indiana; Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, 
	Ohio, and Wisconsin have higher rates of stroke mortality than the U.S. age-adjusted
  rate of 56.4 per 100,000. These rates far exceed the Healthy People 2010
  objective of no more than 48 stroke deaths per 100,000 (6). Black men in all six GLRSN states
  had the highest age-adjusted stroke mortality rates overall with ranges from 74.6 
	in Wisconsin
  to 89.9 in Ohio per 100,000. Modifiable risk factors for stroke are prevalent in the Great Lakes region.
  In 2003, Indiana, Michigan, and Ohio had higher percentages of adults with
  diabetes, high cholesterol levels, and high blood pressure who also smoked, 
	were obese, and had an unhealthy diet compared to the U.S. median. Illinois had a higher
  percentage of adults with diabetes and obesity and who had an unhealthy diet (7).
  (Additional statistics about the region are available from the GLRSN Web
  site at http://glrsn.uic.edu.*) In 2003, CDC published A Public Health Action Plan to Prevent Heart
  Disease and Stroke (8). One of the components of this comprehensive
  action plan is to encourage the public health community to engage in regional
  and global partnerships to increase stroke prevention resources and capitalize on shared
  experiences. The ASA’s Task Force on the Development
  of Stroke Systems also described a need for effective interaction and
  collaboration among health care professionals, services, and agencies that
  treat stroke (9). In 2002, a need for greater coordination and support
  mechanisms among health care professionals was also mentioned by a task force
  sponsored by the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke (10). CDC recognized the importance of collaboration by state heart disease and
  stroke prevention programs and funded three stroke networks. The GLRSN is the
  most recently funded network (2004). Other stroke networks funded by CDC
  include the Tri-State Stroke Network (established in the late 1990s to coordinate stroke
  efforts in North Carolina, Georgia, and South Carolina) and the Delta States
  Stroke Consortium (funded in 2002 to coordinate efforts in Alabama, Arkansas,
  Louisiana, Mississippi, and Tennessee). The GLRSN benefited from the experiences of previous networks and adapted their models to the needs of the Great Lakes region. Back to top GLRSN Priorities and Work Assignments The role of the GLRSN is to increase stroke awareness, prevention, and
  control activities across the Great Lakes region (Illinois,
  Indiana, Michigan, Minnesota, Ohio, and Wisconsin). These states have
  partnered for more than 25 years on other cardiovascular disease initiatives.
  Formation of the GLRSN presented a challenge for states to consider
  initiatives that could affect change at a systems level. Internal structure of
  the GLRSN includes a structure work group (initial stage), a steering 
	committee, a state advisory
  board, work groups that address the 
	three
  priority areas of epidemiology and surveillance, improved quality of care, and 
	public education, and state task force committees. Structure work group A structure work group was identified to create the infrastructure needed
  for the GLRSN. This group created a policy and procedures manual to be updated
  as needed with items such as job descriptions for work group leads,
  information about how decisions are made, and conflict resolution steps. After
  an initial year of meetings, this group decided to streamline GLRSN activities
  and combine its meetings with those of the state advisory board. Steering committee The steering committee is composed of heart disease and stroke prevention 
	program staff, stroke task force liaisons, representatives from partner 
	organizations (e.g., ASA, the National Stroke 
	Association [NSA]), a CDC project officer, and priority work group representatives. This 
	group meets via conference call two to three times each year. The group’s focus is 
	professional development, and calls feature a professional presentation 
	from a stroke-related agency, such as the Brain Attack Coalition, the 
	Commission on Accreditation of Rehabilitation Facilities, or the Association 
	of Black Cardiologists. A strategic planning session of the state advisory 
	board found there is a need to enhance this committee with additional 
	professional organizations. State advisory board The GLRSN state advisory board includes state heart disease and stroke
  prevention program managers and the steering committee. The state advisory board had its first face-to-face meeting
  in February 2005 to develop a work plan to address coordination and
  collaboration efforts to reduce the effects of stroke in Great Lakes states. The
  state advisory board meets once a year and is the GLRSN
  decision-making body responsible for strategic planning and setting
  priorities. At a recent strategic planning session, the board recommended 
	enhancing the steering committee by seeking involvement with additional 
	professional organizations. Priority work groups The GLRSN identified the following three priority areas for its efforts to
  reduce the effects of stroke in the Great Lakes region: epidemiology and
  surveillance, improved quality of care, and public education. For each
  priority area there is a work group comprising individuals from each state.
  State heart disease and stroke prevention program managers identify a representative for each work group, and groups 
	communicate by
  conference call. Epidemiology and surveillance  The goal of the epidemiology and surveillance work group is to build 
	epidemiologic capacity to improve stroke prevention and control efforts. The 
	group determined that the following projects would help them meet this goal: 
	1) identify and prioritize stroke research and evaluation funding, 2) create 
	a single document detailing the effects of stroke within the Great Lakes 
	Region,
  3) develop stroke fact sheets for each state, 4) collaborate with the GLRSN work group 
	focused on improved 
	quality of care to ensure uniform data collection 
	across the region, and 5) organize a data exchange to be held in Chicago in 
	December 2006 to discuss innovative stroke research projects in each of the 
	Great Lakes states.  Improved quality of care  The goal of the work group focused on improved quality of care is to facilitate
  systems-level changes and collaborative efforts to improve acute stroke care
  and rehabilitation. The following activities were identified to meet
  this goal: 1) conduct an assessment of emergency medical services (EMS) in collaboration with the state EMS
  agency to determine capacity to handle stroke emergencies, 2) develop or
  improve statewide EMS stroke protocols to include use of a stroke scale or 
	clinical assessment tool (e.g., Cincinnati Stroke Scale, Los Angeles Prehospital Stroke Screen, or other emergency assessment) 
	to identify neurological deficits, 3)
  promote appropriate stroke emergency training for dispatchers and first
  responders, 4) conduct a stroke training module at state EMS conferences, 5)
  collaborate with state quality improvement organizations on training
  initiatives about stroke prevention and care, 6) promote communication among
  rehabilitation specialists and managed care organizations to coordinate stroke
  patient care effectively, 7) invite rehabilitation specialists and managed
  care organizations to participate in state stroke task force committees, and
  8) share successful stroke protocols (hospital, physician, and EMS) with the GLRSN. The group working on improved quality of care reviewed findings from the 
	Paul Coverdell National Acute Stroke Registry prototypes in Michigan, Ohio 
	(11), and
  Illinois (12) and from the Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services findings in
  the Sixth Scope of Work stroke measures (13). These reviews revealed that
  improvements are needed in the following areas: 1) deep vein thrombosis
  prophylaxis, 2) lipid profiles, 3) coordination of atrial fibrillation
  treatment with anticoagulation therapy, 4) dysphagia screening, 5) smoking
  cessation counseling, and 6) physician, EMS personnel, and public education 
	about the urgency of stroke and the short time after a stroke that tissue plasminogen activator (tPA) 
	treatment can be given to some patients to reverse stroke effects.  The quality improvement group shared with GLRSN states a list of quality 
	improvement tools,
  resources about evidence-based clinical guidelines, and stroke registry quality improvement
  templates from the Illinois Care and Prevention Treatment Utilization Registry 
	(CAPTURE) program. The group assembled a
  panel of EMS professionals to discuss EMS stroke initiatives with GLRSN
  partners. Future work group projects include sharing stroke rehabilitation
  resources among GLRSN states and cosponsoring workshops about improving stroke 
	quality of care with the National Stroke Association. Public education  The goal of the public education work group is to promote awareness of the
  warning signs of stroke and the need to call 911. The group identified the
  following activities to meet this goal: 1) implement strategies to reach
  high-risk populations with messages about stroke symptoms, 2) explore
  partnership opportunities with major professional sports teams to create
  stroke public education events, 3) conduct stroke awareness activities
  annually in May and include events such as a proclamation by the governor to
  declare May as stroke awareness month, 4) conduct a stroke education media
  campaign using public service announcements or paid advertisements, and 5)
  partner with state agencies, such as offices of bioterrorism and EMS, to
  discuss expanded access to 911 and enhanced 911 services. These activities require partnerships among state health departments, the 
	American Heart Association (AHA), ASA, NSA, and other public health stakeholders. The
  public education work group has completed an inventory of stroke public
  education events in all GLRSN states, prepared a resource list of available 
	stroke public education and media tools, and created a document, Working With
  Professional Sports Teams: How to Do a Stroke Public Education Event, that 
	was distributed through the GLRSN Web site to members and other interested 
	groups and through the listserv for CDC cardiovascular state programs. The 
	goal of this document is to assist heart disease and stroke prevention 
	programs and partners to organize stroke education programs with the asset 
	of visibility that comes from working with professional sports teams.   State stroke task force committees Each state developed a stroke task force committee if one did not already
  exist, and states had different experiences because of varying legislative
  requirements, organizational structures, and financial and staff resources.
  States were given financial resources to begin and sustain a task force for
  three years. Michigan has a stroke task force in place voluntarily, and
  Ohio, Indiana, and Illinois have legislatively mandated stroke task forces. 
	Wisconsin and Minnesota developed stroke task forces after receiving
  funding from the GLRSN. The purpose of each task force is to implement recommendations developed by 
	work groups in the priority areas of epidemiology and surveillance, quality
  of care improvement, and public education. Stroke task force committees
  assist in providing direction for state systems-level change and
  have been integral to the development of the GLRSN. In states that receive CDC heart disease and stroke prevention program 
	funding, the stroke task force works closely with the state heart disease and
  stroke prevention coalition. Stroke task force activities include 1) development
  of treatment guidelines for stroke in Indiana, 2) in Wisconsin, the creation of two continuing
  medical education programs about treatment of stroke and 
  stroke center certification by the Joint Commission on Accreditation of Health
  Care Organizations (JCAHO), and 3) in Michigan, development of a fact sheet,
  Understanding Your Health Care Benefits for Stroke Rehabilitation. Each state
  stroke task force committee is instrumental in implementing recommendations
  from GLRSN work groups. Back to top Successes The GLRSN has carried out several successful projects since its inception,
  and these include an inventory that is the first step in completing a regional
  stroke plan for Great Lakes states. This comprehensive inventory of each state
  will enable GLRSN states to better understand their capabilities in the following 
	areas: 1) EMS and stroke care, 2) state legislation related to
  stroke, 3) stroke risk factors, 4) acute stroke treatment, 5) stroke
  rehabilitation, and 6) state stroke task force committees. Other GLRSN achievements include fostering partnerships among its states
  and organizations, such as the AHA, ASA, NSA, and other national organizations, 
	and presenting posters at the International Stroke Conference and the Stroke 
	Belt Consortium.
  The GLRSN has excelled at sharing stroke-related experiences and resources among its states 
	through its Web site, listserv, monthly e-bulletin, and
  conference calls. Back to top Barriers to Implementation Because the structure
  of each state health department is unique and both financial and personnel
  resources vary widely, the GLRSN has limited ability to implement some activities. Two 
	GLRSN states do not receive CDC funding
  for state heart disease and stroke prevention programs. The format and amount of stroke-specific data vary among states. After
  several attempts, the GLRSN was unable to find and share comparable
  state-specific quality improvement data for stroke because this information is
  almost nonexistent in the Great Lakes region. Several hospitals in the region
  have limited staff and funds for implementing stroke quality-of-care
  improvement tools. As a result, data that do exist are not complete
  representations of the state. Stroke mortality data by race were limited 
	because hospitals are not required to report data on race and ethnicity, and 
	population estimates on race and ethnicity are unreliable. Not all states 
	conducted the heart disease and stroke module in the BRFSS survey, and this difference resulted in variations
  of available data. A variety of stroke education materials are used by GLRSN states, and there is no consistent message 
	or evaluation
  for these materials. Back to top Going Forward The GLRSN identified the following elements as necessary to continue 
	developing and enhancing a regional approach to reduce the effects of
  stroke: 1) a public education message must be developed so that a
  consistent message about stroke symptoms and response is presented across the
  region; 2) a systematic, regional approach to data collection and analysis is
  needed to assess the scope of the regional effects of stroke; 3) stroke
  quality-of-care improvement initiatives that can benefit the region as a whole
  should be explored and implemented; and 4) financial sustainability for the GLRSN must be achieved to enable the network to continue its mission of
  collaboration and coordination among Great Lakes states to reduce the burden
  of stroke and stroke-related disparities associated with race, sex, and geography. Back to top ConclusionThe GLRSN is a regional partnership of state heart disease and stroke
  prevention programs, community partners, national organizations, and state
  stroke task force groups. The goals of the GLRSN are to increase stroke awareness 
	and
  prevention activities across the Great Lakes region and to
  enhance collaboration and coordination among states to reduce the effects of
  stroke. The GLRSN operates through work groups that focus on three priority areas:
  epidemiology and surveillance, quality-of-care improvement, and public
  education. Recommendations from these work groups are presented to each state
  stroke task force for review and consideration so that the task force can
  select and implement recommendations as resources allow. Back to top AcknowledgmentsThe Illinois Department of Public Health receives support from CDC to serve
  as the administrative and fiscal agent for the GLRSN. The Illinois Department
  of Public Health supports the Center for Stroke Research at the University of
  Illinois at Chicago to provide scientific and administrative assistance for
  GLRSN activities. The GLRSN thanks the states of Illinois, Ohio, and Michigan for sharing
  their Paul Coverdell National Acute Stroke Registry prototype data. Back to top Author InformationCorresponding Author: Angela Bray Hedworth, Great Lakes Regional Stroke
  Network,  Center for Stroke Research, University of Illinois at Chicago, 1645 W
  Jackson Blvd, Suite 400, M/C 796, Chicago, IL 60612. Telephone: 312-355-5423. E-mail: hedworth@uic.edu. Author Affiliations: Cassidy S. Smith, Colorado Clinical Guidelines 
	Collaborative, Lakewood, Colo. Ms. Smith was with the Great Lakes Regional Stroke Network, Center 
	for Stroke Research, University of Illinois at Chicago, Chicago, Ill, at the 
	time the article was written. Back to top References
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		Change in the quality of care delivered to Medicare beneficiaries, 1998-1999 to 
		2000-2001. JAMA 2003;289(3):305-12. Back to top *URLs for nonfederal organizations are provided solely as a 
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