Acute internal medicine physicians’ clinical intuition based on acute care telephone referral: A prospective study

Author:

van Dam Paul M. E. L.ORCID,Lasso Peña Roberto E.ORCID,Mommertz Jody A.,Borggreve Hella F.,van Loon Nicole P. H.,Zelis Noortje,Westerman Dewa,Henry Ronald M. A.,Posthouwer Dirk,Cals Jochen W. L.,Stassen Patricia M.ORCID

Abstract

Introduction In the Netherlands, most emergency department (ED) patients are referred by a general practitioner (GP) or a hospital specialist. Early risk stratification during telephone referral could allow the physician to assess the severity of the patients’ illness in the prehospital setting. We aim to assess the discriminatory value of the acute internal medicine (AIM) physicians’ clinical intuition based on telephone referral of ED patients to predict short-term adverse outcomes, and to investigate on which information their predictions are based. Methods In this prospective study, we included adult ED patients who were referred for internal medicine by a GP or a hospital specialist. Primary outcomes were hospital admission and triage category according to the Manchester Triage System (MTS). Secondary outcome was 31-day mortality. The discriminatory performance of the clinical intuition was assessed using an area under the receiver operating characteristics curve (AUC). To identify which information is important to predict adverse outcomes, we performed univariate regression analysis. Agreement between predicted and observed MTS triage category was assessed using intraclass and Spearman’s correlation. Results We included 333 patients, of whom 172 (51.7%) were referred by a GP, 146 (43.8%) by a hospital specialist, and 12 (3.6%) by another health professional. The AIM physician’s clinical intuition showed good discriminatory performance regarding hospital admission (AUC 0.72, 95% CI: 0.66–0.78) and 31-day mortality (AUC 0.73, 95% CI: 0.64–0.81). Univariate regression analysis showed that age ≥65 years and a sense of alarm were significant predictors. The predicted and observed triage category were similar in 45.2%, but in 92.5% the prediction did not deviate by more than one category. Intraclass and Spearman’s correlation showed fair agreement between predicted and observed triage category (ICC 0.48, Spearman’s 0.29). Conclusion Clinical intuition based on relevant information during a telephone referral can be used to accurately predict short-term outcomes, allowing for early risk stratification in the prehospital setting and managing ED patient flow more effectively.

Publisher

Public Library of Science (PLoS)

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