Posted on: 14 April 2008
The results of the first Irish National Audit of Stroke Care (INASC), carried out by a joint research team from Trinity College Dublin and the Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland (RCSI) were published last week. The project commissioned by the Irish Heart Foundation (IHF), in association with the Department of Health and Children, is the largest study of stroke ever to take place in Ireland. The research team was led by Professor of Gerontology, Desmond O’Neill at TCD and AMiNCH in Tallaght and Professor Hannah McGee of the RCSI.
Each year around 10,000 Irish people have a stroke and about 2,500 people die (more than from bowel, breast and prostate cancer combined), yet just one Irish hospital out of 37 has a fully resourced stroke unit.
The project involved six separate surveys: hospital clinical and organisational audits, and community-based surveys of general practitioners, allied healthcare practitioners, patients and carers, and nursing homes.
Early diagnosis and treatment for stroke patients can mean the difference between life and death or mild and severe disability for the rest of their lives. The findings from the National Audit of Stroke Care carried out by the TCD and RCSI research team include the following: