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Cerebral Vascular Accidents (stroke) and Myocardial Infarction (MI), which share the same risk factors, treatments and pathophysiological mechanisms, have become two major public health problems due to the increase in their prevalence rate and the longer survival after such an event in developed countries.
International data, including French data and data from our own registries, illustrate that:
Local and foreign experiments have demonstrated the value of intensive, coordinated and multi-professional stroke and MI monitoring, including nurses, in terms of: better control of risk factors and reduction of the rate of re-hospitalization by recurrence in stroke follow-up; improvement of the patient's general condition, control of risk factors, reduction in the number of events, decrease in the number of re-hospitalizations and their duration in MI follow-up. The value of pharmacists' additional intervention in intensive post-MI follow-up compared to routine follow-up has also been demonstrated, particularly in terms of significant improvement in patient compliance.
The hypothesis is that 2 years of intensive follow-up for both post-stroke or post-MI patients, by trained hospital and liberal nurses, in conjunction with doctors and pharmacists, is of medico-economic interest compared to usual follow-up. Therefore a medico-economic evaluation was designed to evaluate the efficiency of this model, which combines community-based and recourse care, prevention and coordination of care compared to usual follow-up.
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Inclusion criteria
Patient or legal representative who has given oral consent
Patient over 18 years of age
Patient with:
Patient followed up in one of the 6 public health establishments of the GHT 21-52 (regional group of hospitals) or at the Valmy clinic in Dijon also participating in the project
Patient with estimated survival beyond 12 months
Exclusion criteria
859 participants in 4 patient groups
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Central trial contact
Yannick BEJOT
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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