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Stroke/transient ischaemic attack (TIA)


+ Emergency

If any of the following are present or suspected, please refer the patient to the emergency department (via ambulance if necessary) or seek emergent medical advice if in a remote region.

 

  • Acute stroke/TIA
  • Bilateral limb weakness with or without bladder and/or bowel dysfunction
  • Acute rapidly progressive weakness (Guillain-Barre Syndrome, myelopathy)
  • Acute onset severe:
    • ataxia
    • vertigo
    • visual loss
  • Status epilepticus/epilepsy with Red flags:
    • first seizure
    • focal deficit post-ictally
    • seizure associated with recent trauma
    • persistent severe headache > 1 hour post-ictally
    • seizure with fever
  • Altered level of consciousness
  • Headache with Red flags:
    • sudden onset/thunderclap headache
    • severe headache with signs of systemic illness (fever, neck stiffness, vomiting, confusion, drowsiness)
    • first severe headache age > 50 years
    • severe headache associated with recent head trauma
    • recent onset headaches in young obese females
  • Delirium/sudden onset confusion with or without fever
  • Acute severe exacerbation of known MS

+ Useful management information

  • Antiplatelet and statin therapy
  • Consider anticoagulation therapy if appropriate
  • Risk factor assessment/modification (hypertension diabetes, smoking)
  • Consider referral to speech pathology if swallowing or communication deficits evident

+ Minimum referral criteria

+ Standard referral information to be included in all referrals

Essential referral information

Without this information the referral will be rejected

  • General referral information
  • ELFT FBC fasting lipids and glucose results
  • Neuroimaging results

Additional referral information for referrals

Please consider including this information into the referral to reduce the patient's risk of further event. For further information  and clinical guidelines go to The Stroke Foundation Website
  • ABCD2 stroke risk score
  • ECG results
  • Doppler ultrasound carotid vessels
  • Echocardiogram, if indicated e.g. arrhythmia, cardiac murmurs, heart failure
  • Holter monitor results


Last updated: Monday, August 13, 2018

Send referrals to


Secure messaging:
Secure web transfer IQ43050005G

General Fax:
3810 1438

Priority Fax for urgent category 1 referrals:
3413 7277

Post:
Outpatients Referrals Centre
PO Box 73, Ipswich
Queensland, 4305

Patient Enquiries:
3810 1217

GP/Specialist Referral Enquiry:
3810 1869 or 3810 1858


Named referrals

If you would like to send a named referral, please address it to the specialist on the referral template, who will allocate a suitably qualified specialist to see the patient.

From July 1 2017 Commonwealth growth funding has been capped. This changes how WMHS can fund its growth as an organisation. Named referrals from GP’s help support hospital funding through a Medicare bulk-billing arrangement. The new federal funding model incorporates specific pricing for patients which removes concerns around ‘double dipping'. This benefits hospital and patient services.


Patient must bring

  • Medicare card
  • Any concession cards (e.g. Pension, Health Care, DVA, PBS Safety Net, ADF, etc)