Literature DB >> 24629665

Evaluating implementation of the emergency severity index in a Belgian hospital.

Jochen Bergs1, Sandra Verelst2, Jean-Bernard Gillet2, Dominique Vandijck2.   

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: Triage aims to categorize patients based on their clinical need and the available departmental resources. To accomplish this goal, one needs to ensure that the implemented triage system is reliable and that staff use it correctly. Therefore this study assessed the ability of Belgium nurses to apply the Emergency Severity Index (ESI), version 4, to hypothetical case scenarios after an educational intervention.
METHODS: An ESI educational intervention was implemented in accordance with the ESI manual. Using paper case scenarios, nurses' interrater agreement was assessed by comparing triage nurse ESI levels with the reference answers noted in the implementation manual. Interrater agreement was measured by the percentage of agreement and Cohen's κ coefficient using different weighting schemes.
RESULTS: Overall, 77.5% of the scenario cases were coded according the ESI guidelines, resulting in a good interrater agreement (κ = 0.72, linear weighted κ = 0.84, quadratic weighted κ = 0.92, and triage-weighted scheme = 0.79). Interrater agreement varied when evaluating each ESI level separately. Undertriage was more common than overtriage. The highest misclassification range (37.8%) occurred in ESI level 2 scenarios, with 99.2% of the misclassifications being undertriaged. DISCUSSION: Implementation of the ESI into a novel setting guided by a locally developed training program resulted in suboptimal interrater agreement. Existing weighted κ schemes overestimated the interrater agreement between the triage nurse-assigned ESI level and the reference standard. By providing an aggregated measure of agreement, which allows partial agreement, clinically significant misclassification was masked by a misleading "good" interrater agreement.
Copyright © 2014 Emergency Nurses Association. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Emergency nursing; Emergency service, hospital; Implementation; Triage

Mesh:

Year:  2014        PMID: 24629665     DOI: 10.1016/j.jen.2014.01.006

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Emerg Nurs        ISSN: 0099-1767            Impact factor:   1.836


  5 in total

1.  Outcome-Based Validity and Reliability Assessment of Raters Regarding the Admission Triage Level in the Emergency Department: a Cross-Sectional Study.

Authors:  Seyedhossein Seyedhosseini-Davarani; Amir Nejati; Hooman Hossein-Nejad; Seyed-Mohammad Mousavi; Mojtaba Sedaghat; Mona Arbab; Shahram Bagheri-Hariri
Journal:  Adv J Emerg Med       Date:  2018-04-08

2.  Comparison between Emergency Severity Index and Heart Failure Triage Scale in heart failure patients: A randomized clinical trial.

Authors:  Ahmad Pouyamehr; Amir Mirhaghi; Mohammad Davood Sharifi; Ali Eshraghi
Journal:  World J Emerg Med       Date:  2019

3.  Emergency Severity Index: accuracy in risk classification.

Authors:  Joselito Adriano da Silva; Angélica Santos Emi; Eliseth Ribeiro Leão; Maria Carolina Barbosa Teixeira Lopes; Meiry Fernanda Pinto Okuno; Ruth Ester Assayag Batista
Journal:  Einstein (Sao Paulo)       Date:  2017 Oct-Dec

4.  Reliability of the revised Swiss Emergency Triage Scale: a computer simulation study.

Authors:  Olivier T Rutschmann; Olivier W Hugli; Christophe Marti; Olivier Grosgurin; Antoine Geissbuhler; Michel Kossovsky; Josette Simon; François P Sarasin
Journal:  Eur J Emerg Med       Date:  2018-08       Impact factor: 2.799

5.  Comparison between Emergency Severity Index plus peak flow meter and Emergency Severity Index in the dyspneic patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease: A randomized clinical trial.

Authors:  Mahin Hamechizfahm Roudi; Javad Malekzadeh; Mohsen Ebrahimi; Amir Mirhaghi; MohammadTaghi Shakeri
Journal:  Turk J Emerg Med       Date:  2019-04-17
  5 in total

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