| Literature DB >> 28874946 |
Danielle M McCarthy1, Grant N Scott2, D Mark Courtney1, Alyssa Czerniak1, Amer Z Aldeen3, Stephanie Gravenor1, Scott M Dresden1.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Emergency department (ED) patients' Internet search terms prior to arrival have not been well characterized. The objective of this analysis was to characterize the Internet search terms patients used prior to ED arrival and their relationship to final diagnoses.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28874946 PMCID: PMC5576630 DOI: 10.5811/westjem.2017.5.34108
Source DB: PubMed Journal: West J Emerg Med ISSN: 1936-900X
Distribution of Internet search terms.
| Search term groupings | Description | n (%) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Symptom | A search term querying a descriptive symptom, but not a specific diagnosis by name | 133 (54.7%) | “Blood in urine” (pt 386) |
| Diagnosis | A search term querying a diagnosis by name (and or symptoms related to a diagnosis by name) | 77 (31.7%) | “UTI” (pt 452) |
| Treatment options | A search term querying treatment options for different diagnoses or symptoms | 3 (1.2%) | “elbow surgery” (pt 466) |
| Anatomy | A search term querying items related to anatomy without clear reference to symptoms, diagnosis or treatment | 10 (4.1%) | “gall bladder” (pt 725) |
| ED processes or physicians | A search term querying things related to the hospital (e.g., availability of specialists), the emergency department and its processes (e.g., wait time) or specific physicians | 1 (0.5%) | “hand doctors” (pt 142) |
| Other | Questions in which the main topic was unclear or did not fit into any of the above categories | 19 (7.8%) | “how often should I check my fever” (pt 495) |
N=243 search terms from 170 patients.
pt, patient, ED, emergency department; UTI, urinary tract infection.
Concordance between chief complaint on ED presentation and final diagnosis on ED discharge.
| Example from our sample | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| ||||
| Concordance grouping | Description | n (%) | Chief complaint | Final diagnosis |
| No concordance | No relationship between chief complaint and final diagnosis in body system or disease | 20 (11.8%) | “Chest pain” | →UTI |
| “Headache/Dizziness” | →Rhabdomyolysis | |||
| Partial concordance | CC and FD are mostly unrelated, but have one aspect of similarity (e.g., region of the body involved) | 44 (25.9%) | “Abdominal pain” | →Malignant neoplasm of bladder |
| “SOB” | →Acute Anxiety state, unspecified | |||
| Near concordance | CC and FD are mostly unrelated, but have one aspect of similarity (e.g., region of the body involved) | 51 (30.0%) | “Right lower quadrant pain” | →Appendicitis |
| “Finger injury” | →Closed fracture of the middle or proximal phalanx of the hand | |||
| Complete concordance | CC is the same as FD (allowing for differences in medical and lay terminology) | 55 (32.3%) | “Numbness L side since yesterday” | →Disturbance of skin sensation |
| “Infection to R leg” | →Cellulitis and abscess of Leg | |||
| “Pancreatitis” | →Pancreatitis | |||
CC, chief complaint; FD, final diagnosis; L, left; R, right; SOB, shortness of breath; UTI, urinary tract infection.
FigureFlowchart of patient enrollment.
Sample demographics in an analysis of the use of health-related Internet searches by patients prior to presentation at the emergency department (ED).
| Variable | n (%) |
|---|---|
| Age, mean (standard deviation) | 47 (18.2) |
| Geriatric (age >65) | 45 (26.5) |
| Female | 99 (58.6) |
| Race | |
| African American | 33 (19.5) |
| White | 111 (65.7) |
| Other | 25 (14.8) |
| Education | |
| High school or less | 23 (13.6) |
| Some college | 34 (20.1) |
| College graduate | 59 (34.9) |
| Advanced degree | 53 (31.4) |
| Household income level ($) | |
| <50,000 | 50 (32.9) |
| 50,000–100,000 | 50 (32.9) |
| >100,000 | 52 (34.2) |
| Triage acuity (ESI) | |
| 2-Emergent | 72 (42.3%) |
| 3-Urgent | 77 (45.3%) |
| 4-Semi-urgent | 21 (12.4%) |
| ED disposition | |
| Discharged home | 105 (61.8%) |
| Admit-observation status | 32 (18.8%) |
| Admit-inpatient status | 33 (19.4%) |
| Number of devices owned with internet access | |
| 0 | 3 (1.8) |
| 1 | 30 (16.6) |
| 2 | 52 (30.6) |
| 3 | 85 (50.0) |
| Report daily internet use | 162(95.9) |
ESI, Emergency Severity Index.
The trajectory between initial Internet search term and final emergency department diagnosis.
| Trajectory grouping | Examples from our sample | |
|---|---|---|
|
|
| |
| n (%) | Search term | Final diagnosis (ICD-9) |
| Flat trajectory—symptoms | ||
| 53 (34%) searched symptoms | final diagnosis symptom based | |
| abdominal pain→ | abdominal pain, other unspecified site (789.09) | |
| side pain, fever, shaking→ | abdominal pain, unspecified site (789) | |
| Flat trajectory—diagnosis | ||
| 20 (13%) searched diagnosis→ | final “formal” diagnosis (original search correct) | |
| COPD→ | obstructive chronic bronchitis, with exacerbation (491.21) | |
| 33 (21%) searched diagnosis→ | final “formal” diagnosis (original search incorrect) | sprain or strain of unspecified site of wrist (842) |
| General to specific trajectory | ||
| 35 (22%) searched symptoms→ | final “formal” diagnosis | |
| fever→ | pneumonia (486) | |
| Specific to general trajectory | ||
| 16 (10%) searched diagnosis→ | final diagnosis symptom based | |
| stress fracture→ | pain in soft tissues of limb (729.5) | |
N=157 (excluded 13 patients who only searched for treatment, anatomy, ED processes or “other”).