Literature DB >> 34628718

Validity and reliability of the Interagency Integrated Triage Tool in a regional emergency department in Papua New Guinea.

Rob Mitchell1,2, John J McKup3, Colin Banks4, Regina Nason3, Gerard O'Reilly1,2, Scotty Kandelyo5,6, Sarah Bornstein7, Travis Cole4, Teri Reynolds8, Paulus Ripa9, Sarah Körver7, Peter Cameron1,2.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: The Interagency Integrated Triage Tool (IITT) is a novel, three-tier triage system recommended by the World Health Organization. The present study sought to assess the validity and reliability of a pilot version of the tool in a resource-limited ED in regional Papua New Guinea.
METHODS: This pragmatic prospective observational study, conducted at Mount Hagen Provincial Hospital, commenced 1 month after IITT implementation. The facility did not have a pre-existing triage system. All ED patients presenting within a 5-month period were included. The primary outcome was sensitivity for the detection of time-critical illness, defined by 10 pre-specified diagnoses. The association between triage category and ED outcomes was examined using Cramer's V correlation coefficient. Reliability was assessed by inter-rater agreement between a local and an experienced external triage officer.
RESULTS: There were 9437 presentations during the study period and 9175 (97.2%) had a triage category recorded. Overall, 138 (1.5%) were classified as category 1 (emergency), 1438 (15.7%) as category 2 (priority) and 7599 (82.8%) as category 3 (non-urgent). When applied by a mix of community health workers, nurses, health extension officers and doctors, the tool's sensitivity for the detection of time-critical illness was 77.8% (95% confidence interval 64.4-88.0). The admission rate was 14.5% (20/138) among emergency patients, 12.0% (173/1438) among priority patients and 0.4% (30/7599) among non-urgent patients (P = 0.00). Death in the ED occurred in 13 (9.4%) of 138 emergency patients, 34 (2.4%) of 1438 priority patients and four (0.1%) of 7599 non-urgent patients (P = 0.00). The negative predictive value for these outcomes was >99.5%. Among 170 observed triage assessments, weighted κ was 0.81 (excellent agreement). On average, it took clinicians 2 min 43 s (standard deviation 1:10) to complete a triage assessment.
CONCLUSION: There is limited published data regarding the predictive validity and inter-rater reliability of the IITT. In this pragmatic study, the pilot version of the tool demonstrated adequate performance. Evaluation in other emergency care settings is recommended.
© 2021 Australasian College for Emergency Medicine.

Entities:  

Keywords:  emergency care; low- and middle-income country; triage

Mesh:

Year:  2021        PMID: 34628718     DOI: 10.1111/1742-6723.13877

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Emerg Med Australas        ISSN: 1742-6723            Impact factor:   2.151


  1 in total

1.  Emergency department triage and COVID-19: Performance of the Interagency Integrated Triage Tool during a pandemic surge in Papua New Guinea.

Authors:  Rob Mitchell; Carl Kingston; Rayleen Tefatu; Sarah Bornstein; Mangu Kendino; Duncan Sengiromo; Jasper Pole; Sylvia Kuk; Betty Josaiah; Leigh Elton; Colin Banks; Sarah Körver; Peter Cameron; Gerard O'Reilly
Journal:  Emerg Med Australas       Date:  2022-06-27       Impact factor: 2.279

  1 in total

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