Emergency triage: comparing a novel computer triage program with standard triage

Emergency department (ED) triage prioritizes patients based on urgency of care; however, little previous testing of triage tools in a live ED environment has been performed. To determine the agreement between a computer decision tool and memory-based triage. Consecutive patients presenting to a larg...

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Veröffentlicht in:Academic emergency medicine 2005-06, Vol.12 (6), p.502-507
Hauptverfasser: Dong, Sandy L, Bullard, Michael J, Meurer, David P, Colman, Ian, Blitz, Sandra, Holroyd, Brian R, Rowe, Brian H
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Emergency department (ED) triage prioritizes patients based on urgency of care; however, little previous testing of triage tools in a live ED environment has been performed. To determine the agreement between a computer decision tool and memory-based triage. Consecutive patients presenting to a large, urban, tertiary care ED were assessed in the usual fashion and by a blinded study nurse using a computerized decision support tool. Triage score distribution and agreement between the two triage methods were reported. A random subset of patients was selected and reviewed by a blinded expert panel as a consensus standard. Over five weeks, 722 ED patients were assessed; complete data were available from 693 (96%) score pairs. Agreement between the two methods was poor (kappa = 0.202; 95% confidence interval [95% CI] = 0.150 to 0.254); however, agreement improved when using weighted kappa (0.360; 95% CI = 0.305 to 0.415) or "within one" level kappa (0.732; 95% CI = 0.644 to 0.821). When compared with the expert panel, the nurse triage scores showed lower agreement (0.263; 95% CI = 0.133 to 0.394) than the tool (kappa = 0.426; 95% CI = 0.289 to 0.564). There was a significant down-triaging of patients when patients were triaged without the computerized tool. Admission rates also differed between the triage systems. There was significant discrepancy by nurses using memory-based triage when compared with a computer tool. Triage decision support tools can mitigate this drift, which has administrative implications for EDs.
ISSN:1069-6563
1553-2712
DOI:10.1111/j.1553-2712.2005.tb00889.x