Journal article
Accuracy of the Emergency Severity Index Triage Instrument for Identifying Elder Emergency Department Patients Receiving an Immediate Life-saving Intervention
Academic emergency medicine, v 17(3), pp 238-243
Mar 2010
PMID: 20370755
Featured in Collection : UN Sustainable Development Goals @ Drexel
Abstract
Objectives:
The study objective was to determine the sensitivity and specificity of the Emergency Severity Index (ESI) triage instrument for the identification of elder patients receiving an immediate life-saving intervention in the emergency department (ED).
Methods:
The authors reviewed medical records for consecutive patients 65 years or older who presented to a single academic ED serving a large community of elders during a 1-month period. ESI triage scores were compared to actual ED course with attention to the occurrence of an immediate life-saving intervention. The sensitivity and specificity of an ESI triage level of 1 for the identification of patients receiving an immediate intervention was calculated. For 50 cases, the triage nurse ESI designation was compared to the triage level determined by an expert triage nurse based on retrospective record review.
Results:
Of 782 consecutive patients 65 years or older who presented to the ED, 18 (2%) had an ESI level of 1, 176 (23%) had an ESI level of 2, 461 (60%) had an ESI level of 3, 100 (13%) had an ESI level of 4, and 18 (2%) had an ESI level of 5. Twenty-six patients received an immediate life-saving intervention. ESI triage scores for these 26 individuals were as follows: ESI 1, 11 patients; ESI 2, nine patients; and ESI 3, six patients. The sensitivity of ESI to identify patients receiving an immediate intervention was 42.3% (95% confidence interval [CI] = 23.3% to 61.3%); the specificity was 99.2% (95% CI = 98.0% to 99.7%). For 17 of 50 cases in which actual triage nurse and expert nurse ESI levels disagreed, undertriage by the triage nurses was more common than overtriage (13 vs. 4 patients).
Conclusions:
The ESI triage instrument identified fewer than half of elder patients receiving an immediate life-saving intervention. Failure to follow established ESI guidelines in the triage of elder patients may contribute to apparent undertriage.
ACADEMIC EMERGENCY MEDICINE 2010; 17:238-243 (C) 2010 by the Society for Academic Emergency Medicine.
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Details
- Title
- Accuracy of the Emergency Severity Index Triage Instrument for Identifying Elder Emergency Department Patients Receiving an Immediate Life-saving Intervention
- Creators
- Timothy F. Platts-Mills - College Station Medical CenterDebbie Travers - University of North Carolina at Chapel HillKevin Biese - University of North Carolina at Chapel HillBrenda McCall - University of North Carolina at Chapel HillSteve Kizer - University of North Carolina at Chapel HillMichael LaMantia - University of North Carolina at Chapel HillJan Busby-Whitehead - College Station Medical CenterCharles B. Cairns - University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
- Publication Details
- Academic emergency medicine, v 17(3), pp 238-243
- Publisher
- Wiley
- Number of pages
- 6
- Resource Type
- Journal article
- Language
- English
- Academic Unit
- College of Medicine
- Web of Science ID
- WOS:000275092500002
- Scopus ID
- 2-s2.0-77951109438
- Other Identifier
- 991021448159404721
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- Web of Science research areas
- Emergency Medicine