Emergency department patient and physician survey accuracy compared to chart abstraction in patients with acute respiratory illness

Author:

Hunold Katherine M.1ORCID,Schwaderer Andrew L.2,Exline Matthew3,Hebert Courtney45ORCID,Lampert Brent C.6,Southerland Lauren T.1ORCID,Stephens Julie A.7,Boyer Edward W.1,Gure Tanya R.8,Mion Lorraine C.9,Hill Michael1,Chu Ching‐Min B.1,Ernie Edriane1,Caterino Jeffrey M.1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Emergency Medicine The Ohio State University Columbus Ohio USA

2. Section of Pediatric Nephrology Indiana University Indianapolis Indiana USA

3. Department of Internal Medicine The Ohio State University Columbus Ohio USA

4. Department of Biomedical Informatics The Ohio State University Columbus Ohio USA

5. Division of Infectious Disease The Ohio State University Columbus Ohio USA

6. Division of Cardiovascular Medicine The Ohio State University Columbus Ohio USA

7. Center for Biostatistics, Department of Biomedical Informatics The Ohio State University Columbus Ohio USA

8. Division of General Internal Medicine & Geriatrics The Ohio State University Columbus Ohio USA

9. College of Nursing The Ohio State University Columbus Ohio USA

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundHigh‐quality research studies in older adults are needed. Unfortunately, the accuracy of chart review data in older adult patients has been called into question by previous studies. Little is known on this topic in patients with suspected pneumonia, a disease with 500,000 annual older adult U.S. emergency department (ED) visits that presents a diagnostic challenge to ED physicians. The study objective was to compare direct interview and chart abstraction as data sources.MethodsWe present a preplanned secondary analysis of a prospective, observational cohort of ED patients ≥65 years of age with suspected pneumonia in two Midwest EDs. We describe the agreement between chart review and a criterion standard of prospective direct patient survey (symptoms) or direct physician survey (examination findings). Data were collected by chart review and from the patient and treating physician by survey.ResultsThe larger study enrolled 135 older adults; 134 with complete symptom data and 129 with complete examination data were included in this analysis. Pneumonia symptoms (confusion, malaise, rapid breathing, any cough, new/worse cough, any sputum production, change to sputum) had agreement between patient/legally authorized representative survey and chart review ranging from 47.8% (malaise) to 80.6% (confusion). All examination findings (rales, rhonchi, wheeze) had percent agreement between physician survey and chart review of ≥80%. However, all kappas except wheezing were less than 0.60, indicating weak agreement.ConclusionsBoth patient symptoms and examination findings demonstrated discrepancies between chart review and direct survey with larger discrepancies in symptoms reported. Researchers should consider these potential discrepancies during study design and data interpretation.

Funder

National Institute on Aging

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Emergency Medicine,General Medicine

Reference18 articles.

1. Achieving Diagnostic Excellence for Older Patients

2. Asymptomatic Bacteriuria versus Symptom Underreporting in Older Emergency Department Patients with Suspected Urinary Tract Infection

3. National Hospital Ambulatory Medical Care Survey.Emergency department summary tables. Ambulatory and Hospital Care Statistics Branch of the National Center for Health Statistics.2018. Accessed February 20 2023.https://www.cdc.gov/nchs/data/nhamcs/web_tables/2018‐ed‐web‐tables‐508.pdf

4. A multicenter analysis of the ED diagnosis of pneumonia

5. Diagnosing Dyspneic Older Adult Emergency Department Patients: A Pilot Study

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