Literature DB >> 18849811

Automatically-computed prehospital severity scores are equivalent to scores based on medic documentation.

Andrew T Reisner1, Liangyou Chen, Thomas M McKenna, Jaques Reifman.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Prehospital severity scores can be used in routine prehospital care, mass casualty care, and military triage. If computers could reliably calculate clinical scores, new clinical and research methodologies would be possible. One obstacle is that vital signs measured automatically can be unreliable. We hypothesized that Signal Quality Indices (SQI's), computer algorithms that differentiate between reliable and unreliable monitored physiologic data, could improve the predictive power of computer-calculated scores.
METHODS: In a retrospective analysis of trauma casualties transported by air ambulance, we computed the Triage Revised Trauma Score (RTS) from archived travel monitor data. We compared the areas-under-the-curve (AUC's) of receiver operating characteristic curves for prediction of mortality and red blood cell transfusion for 187 subjects with comparable quantities of good-quality and poor-quality data.
RESULTS: Vital signs deemed reliable by SQI's led to significantly more discriminatory severity scores than vital signs deemed unreliable. We also compared automatically-computed RTS (using the SQI's) versus RTS computed from vital signs documented by medics. For the subjects in whom the SQI algorithms identified 15 consecutive seconds of reliable vital signs data (n = 350), the automatically-computed scores' AUC's were the same as the medic-based scores' AUC's. Using the Prehospital Index in place of RTS led to very similar results, corroborating our findings.
CONCLUSIONS: SQI algorithms improve automatically-computed severity scores, and automatically-computed scores using SQI's are equivalent to medic-based scores.

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Year:  2008        PMID: 18849811     DOI: 10.1097/TA.0b013e31815eb142

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Trauma        ISSN: 0022-5282


  3 in total

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Authors:  A T Reisner; M Y Khitrov; L Chen; A Blood; K Wilkins; W Doyle; S Wilcox; T Denison; J Reifman
Journal:  Appl Clin Inform       Date:  2013-08-21       Impact factor: 2.342

2.  Clinician blood pressure documentation of stable intensive care patients: an intelligent archiving agent has a higher association with future hypotension.

Authors:  Caleb W Hug; Gari D Clifford; Andrew T Reisner
Journal:  Crit Care Med       Date:  2011-05       Impact factor: 7.598

3.  Muscle Oxygen Saturation Improves Diagnostic Association Between Initial Vital Signs and Major Hemorrhage: A Prospective Observational Study.

Authors:  Andrew T Reisner; Shwetha Edla; Jianbo Liu; John T Rubin; Jill E Thorsen; Erin Kittell; Jason B Smith; Daniel D Yeh; Jaques Reifman
Journal:  Acad Emerg Med       Date:  2016-02-29       Impact factor: 3.451

  3 in total

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