
The American Heart Association presents the Get With The Guidelines® – Coronary Artery Disease Rural Recognition Level: Gold award for implementation of quality treatment, care coordination for heart attack patients.
Pikeville Medical Center (PMC) has received the American Heart Association’s Get With The Guidelines® – Coronary Artery Disease Rural Gold Level Recognition for its commitment to offering rapid, research-based care to people experiencing a specific type of heart attack known as an ST elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI), known to be more severe and dangerous than other types of heart attacks.
Each year, more than 1 million cases of acute coronary syndrome (ACS) require hospitalization in the U.S., and about 30% of ACS cases are classified as STEMI, caused by a complete blockage in a coronary artery.[1] Like all heart attacks, this requires timely treatment to restore blood flow as quickly as possible.
“When someone experiences a STEMI heart attack, American Heart Association guidelines call for specific actions performed in the hospital in a consistent and timely fashion to prevent further myocardial damage and to save lives,” said Karen E. Joynt Maddox, M.D., MPH, co-author on the American Heart Association’s presidential advisory on rural health. “Where you live should not determine if you live, and rural communities deserve high-quality cardiac care. Pikeville Medical Center is recognized for consistently providing these patients with the care, guidance and medical therapy they need to give them the best chance of survival.”
The Get With The Guidelines – Coronary Artery Disease Rural Recognition award is earned by hospitals that demonstrate a commitment to treating patients according to the most up-to-date research-based guidelines for STEMI care as outlined by the American Heart Association.
“We are proud that our team at Pikeville Medical Center is being recognized for the important work we do every day to improve the lives of people in Eastern Kentucky who experience heart attack, giving them the best possible chance of recovery and survival,” said Jamessa Scott, Performance Improvement Nurse Practitioner. “As a hospital in a rural community, we deal with characteristics, such as extended interfacility transportation times and limited staffing resources. We’ve made it a goal to make sure those hurdles do not affect the standard of care our patients receive.”
The award recognizes hospitals for their efforts toward STEMI care excellence demonstrated by composite score compliance with guideline-directed care, including timely electrocardiogram and transfer, aspirin administration, administration of thrombolytic therapy, receptor inhibitor and anticoagulant, and more.
“We set a goal of achieving Gold Status for Rural STEMI Care for PMC this year, and we successfully accomplished it,” said Scott, Performance Improvement Nurse Practitioner. “I am in awe of the team we have here at PMC. This award speaks volumes about the dedication, hard work and commitment every team member brings to the care of some of our sickest patients.”
[1] Akbar H, Foth C, Kahloon RA, Mountfort S. Acute ST-Elevation Myocardial Infarction (STEMI). StatPearls [Internet]. Treasure Island (FL): StatPearls Publishing; January 2024. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK532281/.