Home-Time
Cross-source consensus on Home-Time from 1 sources and 6 claims.
1 sources · 6 claims
Uses
How it works
Benefits
Preparation
Risks & contraindications
Background
Highlighted claims
- The mean home-time within 180 days post-stroke was 166.6 days, and it decreased systematically with age, deprivation, comorbidity burden, and stroke severity. — Measurement of quality of stroke care with national electronic health records: a prospective cohort study during and after the COVID-19 pandemic
- Home-time is defined as days alive and not admitted to hospital within 180 days of the first stroke record, serving as a person-centred proxy for functional recovery derivable from administrative data. — Measurement of quality of stroke care with national electronic health records: a prospective cohort study during and after the COVID-19 pandemic
- Home-time increased by 5.8 days from 2020 to 2023 after adjustment, suggesting overall improvement in post-stroke outcomes as pandemic disruptions eased. — Measurement of quality of stroke care with national electronic health records: a prospective cohort study during and after the COVID-19 pandemic
- Home-time is recommended as an addition to national stroke audit systems because it captures socioeconomic and severity-related disparities that routine audits miss and requires no additional data collection. — Measurement of quality of stroke care with national electronic health records: a prospective cohort study during and after the COVID-19 pandemic
- Home-time correlates with disability and symptom burden but is also influenced by social factors such as family support and does not directly measure neurological impairment. — Measurement of quality of stroke care with national electronic health records: a prospective cohort study during and after the COVID-19 pandemic
- Home-time is influenced by social circumstances and not only clinical severity, which is a key limitation of its use as a disability outcome. — Measurement of quality of stroke care with national electronic health records: a prospective cohort study during and after the COVID-19 pandemic