Quebec City − Telemedicine holds the key to the rehabilitation of people with stroke living in northern, rural, remote Canadian communities, rehabilitation researcher Esmé French told the Canadian Stroke Congress today.
“Bringing stroke care to an area the size of France is a massive challenge — especially when many communities lack year round road access,” says French. “The unique conditions of northern communities require a unique response from the stroke rehabilitation community.”
Those living in many northern communities — which include many Aboriginal residents − have limited, if any, access to stroke rehabilitation, says French, who works at Thunder Bay Regional Health Sciences Centre and is a professional associate with the School of Rehabilitation Studies at McMaster University.
French and her colleagues, physiotherapist Kirsti Reinikka and Dr. Maria Huijbregts, tested the use of telemedicine applications to make consultations with rehabilitation providers available to stroke survivors in these remote areas.
Over a five month period, 10 video consultations took place between stroke survivors and an interdisciplinary team of rehab experts which included a physiotherapist, an occupational therapist, a speech-language pathologist, and a social worker.
The stroke survivors had been discharged from hospital to communities in Northwestern Ontario where access to rehabilitation is severely limited or altogether absent. “The video technology removes the distance barrier and provides a practical alternative when direct services are not available,” says French. “The experience was rated good-to-excellent by both patients and rehabilitation therapists.”
The healthcare, community, and telemedicine partnerships were critical to the success of the program.
“The innovative use of telemedicine technology can overcome geographic and human resource barriers restricting access to care by the Aboriginal community,” says Canadian Stroke Network spokesperson Dr. Antoine Hakim. “This is especially important in a country as large and spread out as Canada, where the Aboriginal communities typically reside in more remote locations.”
French points out that access to rehabilitation professionals is one piece in assuring that people in remote communities receive all aspects of care. “It’s vital that community members have access to the full continuum of care, including screening, emergency care, and treatment,” she says. “Look at what’s possible by bringing a host of professionals to the community via telemedicine. We can take these learnings to other areas.”
“This technological solution can play an important role in providing equal access to stroke care for all Canadians, regardless of where they live,” says Heart and Stroke Foundation spokesperson Dr. Michael Hill. “The ideal, of course, is to start even earlier by preventing strokes in the first place by raising awareness of risk factors.”
Risk factors and the Aboriginal population:
- Aboriginal people are twice as likely to die from stroke (71.5 per 100,000) than the general Canadian population (34.2 per 100,000);
- Aboriginal people are more prone to obesity with a risk just over 1.5 times that of the general population; the overall proportion of First Nations people considered overweight or obese is more than 20 per cent higher than of Canadians overall; and
- The rate of diabetes among Aboriginal people in Canada is three to five times that of the general population and there is a trend to early stage onset;
“First Nations, Inuit, and Métis people are at an even greater risk of heart disease and stroke than the general population,” says Dr. Hill. “Decreasing the number of strokes that occur in Aboriginal communities requires culturally appropriate prevention strategies and novel healthcare solutions to improve outcomes in remote communities.”
The Canadian Heart Health Strategy and Action Plan (CHHS-AP) released in February 2009 contained specific recommendations to reduce heart disease and stroke in Aboriginal/indigenous communities in Canada, including developing a multi-year action plan using a partnership approach involving Aboriginal/indigenous groups, federal/provincial/territorial governments, and nongovernmental organizations.
Heart and Stroke Foundation health information for Aboriginal people can be found at heartandstroke.ca/Aboriginal.
The Canadian Stroke Congress is co-hosted by the Canadian Stroke Network, the Heart and Stroke Foundation and the Canadian Stroke Consortium.
Statements and conclusions of study authors are solely those of the study authors and do not necessarily reflect Foundation or CSN policy or position. The Heart and Stroke Foundation of Canada and the Canadian Stroke Network make no representation
or warranty as to their accuracy or reliability.
The Canadian Stroke Network (canadianstrokenetwork.ca) includes more than 100 of Canada’s leading scientists and clinicians from 24 universities who work collaboratively on various aspects of stroke. The network, which is headquartered at the University of Ottawa, also includes partners from industry, the non-profit sector, provincial and federal governments. The Canadian Stroke Network, one of Canada’s Networks of Centres of Excellence, is committed to reducing the physical, social and economic impact of stroke on the lives of individual Canadians and on society as a whole.
The Heart and Stroke Foundation (heartandstroke.ca), a volunteer-based health charity, leads in eliminating heart disease and stroke and reducing their impact through the advancement of research and its application, the promotion of healthy living, and advocacy.