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Barriers to integrating portable Magnetic Resonance Imaging systems in emergency medical service ambulances for stroke care

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posted on 2024-06-25, 09:20 authored by Arvind Kolangarakath, Kapil Chalil Madathil, Sudeep Hegde, Shubham Agrawal, Mary Bian, Lauren Simmons, Gabby Molloseau, Christine Holmstedt, Dustin LeBlanc, Jillian Harvey, Todd McGeorge, Maria Spampinato, Donna Roberts

This study examines the barriers to integrating portable Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) systems into ambulance services to enable effective triaging of patients to the appropriate hospitals for timely stroke care and potentially reduce door-to-needle time for thrombolytic administration. The study employs a qualitative methodology using a digital twin of the patient handling process developed and demonstrated through semi-structured interviews with 18 participants, including 11 paramedics from an Emergency Medical Services system and seven neurologists from a tertiary stroke care centre. The interview transcripts were thematically analysed to determine the barriers based on the Systems Engineering Initiative for Patient Safety framework. Key barriers include the need for MRI operation skills, procedural complexities in patient handling, space constraints, and the need for training and policy development. Potential solutions are suggested to mitigate these barriers. The findings can facilitate implementing MRI systems in ambulances to expedite stroke treatment.

This study investigates the challenges of integrating portable MRI systems into ambulances for faster stroke care. It identifies key barriers such as operational skills, procedural complexities, space constraints, and policy development needs, and offers a few solutions to improve emergency stroke treatment.

Funding

This study was supported by the Blue Sky Award, from the Office of the Vice Chair for Research, Medical University of South Carolina, and an Academic Matching Grant, from the South Carolina Research Authority.

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