Literature DB >> 20653584

Pediatric emergency physician opinions on ankle radiograph clinical decision rules.

Kathy Boutis1, Erika Constantine, Suzanne Schuh, Martin Pecaric, Derek Stephens, Unni G Narayanan.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: The Low Risk Ankle Rule (LRAR) is a validated clinical decision rule (CDR) about the indications for ankle radiographs in children with acute blunt ankle trauma. Although application of the LRAR has the potential to safely reduce the rate of ankle radiography by 60%, current x-ray rates in most emergency departments (EDs) in the United States and Canada remain unnecessarily high (85%-100%). To evaluate this gap between knowledge and practice, physicians who treat pediatric ankle injuries in EDs were surveyed to determine physician awareness and use of the LRAR, acceptability of the LRAR as measured by the Ottawa Acceptability for Decision Rules Scale (OADRS), and perceived barriers to the use of a validated pediatric ankle x-ray rule.
METHODS: An on-line survey of members of two national pediatric emergency medicine (PEM) physician associations in the United States and Canada was conducted using a modified Dillman technique.
RESULTS: Response rates were 75.6% (149/197) in Canada and 45.7% (352/770) in the United States, yielding an aggregate rate of 51.8%. Only 119 of 478 respondents (24.9%) had heard of the LRAR, and 53 of 432 (12.3%) were sufficiently familiar with the LRAR to apply it. The LRAR scored a mean (+/- standard deviation [SD]) OADRS score of 4.28 out of 6 (+/-0.67), comparable to published OADRS scores for two well-known CDRs used in adults. Of the respondents, 434 of 471 (92.1%) at least "slightly agreed" that ankle x-ray CDRs would be useful in their practice, with no significant differences between the two sides of the border (p = 0.28). Ankle x-ray rules were felt to save time by 342 (72.6%) of the participants, and the pediatric ankle exam was considered easy enough to apply a CDR by 306 (65.0%). The most common barriers reported for use of any ankle x-ray rule included perceived reduction in family satisfaction without imaging in 380 (80.7%), nurse-initiated x-ray protocols not based on ankle x-ray rules in 285 (60.5%), concerns about missing a significant fracture in 248 (52.7%), and a preference for own clinical judgment in 246 (52.2%).
CONCLUSIONS: Although the LRAR had a high acceptability score among respondents in this survey, this validated CDR is not widely known and is even less frequently applied by PEM physicians in the United States and Canada. Barriers were identified that will guide efforts to improve the knowledge translation of the LRAR into pediatric EDs. 2010 by the Society for Academic Emergency Medicine

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Year:  2010        PMID: 20653584     DOI: 10.1111/j.1553-2712.2010.00787.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Acad Emerg Med        ISSN: 1069-6563            Impact factor:   3.451


  3 in total

1.  Effect of the Low Risk Ankle Rule on the frequency of radiography in children with ankle injuries.

Authors:  Kathy Boutis; Paul Grootendorst; Andrew Willan; Amy C Plint; Paul Babyn; Robert J Brison; Arun Sayal; Melissa Parker; Natalie Mamen; Suzanne Schuh; Jeremy Grimshaw; David Johnson; Unni Narayanan
Journal:  CMAJ       Date:  2013-08-12       Impact factor: 8.262

2.  Can paediatric emergency clinicians identify and manage clavicle fractures without radiographs in the emergency department? A prospective study.

Authors:  Marie-Pier Lirette; Benoit Bailey; Samuel Grant; Michael Jackson; Paul Leonard
Journal:  BMJ Paediatr Open       Date:  2018-08-10

Review 3.  Methodological standards for the development and evaluation of clinical prediction rules: a review of the literature.

Authors:  Laura E Cowley; Daniel M Farewell; Sabine Maguire; Alison M Kemp
Journal:  Diagn Progn Res       Date:  2019-08-22
  3 in total

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