Comparison between local and three validated triage systems in an emergency department for 2126 children under 3 months

Author:

Mollet Agathe1ORCID,Rousselet Louis2,Tristram Domitille3,Kalach Nicolas1,Pelzer Marie Moukagni1,Charkaluk Marie‐Laure4,Delebarre Mathilde1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Lille Catholic hospitals, Paediatric Department Lille Catholic University Lille France

2. Lille Catholic hospitals, Medical Information Department Lille Catholic University Lille France

3. Lille Catholic hospitals, Research Department Lille Catholic University Lille France

4. Lille Catholic hospitals, Neonatology Department Lille Catholic University Lille France

Abstract

AbstractAimTriage of patients less than 3 months old was not already studied. The aim was to evaluate Paediatric Emergency Department triage in patients less than 3 months old and newborns using a local system in comparison with three validated paediatric triage systems (Canadian Triage and Acuity Scale, Manchester Triage System and Emergency Severity Index) and to determine inter‐system agreement.MethodsAll admissions of patients less than 3 months old admitted to the Emergency Department of the Saint Vincent University Hospital between April 2018 and December 2019 were included. The local triage system level was determined prospectively for comparison with retrospectively calculated triage levels of the validated systems. Hospitalisation rates were compared and inter‐system agreements determined.ResultsAmong emergency admissions, 2126 were included (55% males, mean age 45 days). Hospitalisation rate increased with priority severity as determined by all triage systems studied. Cohen's kappa showed slight agreement between the local triage system and the Canadian Triage and Acuity Scale, Emergency Severity Index and Manchester Triage System (weighted kappa = 0.133, 0.185 and 0.157 respectively).ConclusionWhether prospective or retrospective triage used, the systems studied exhibited good association with hospitalisation rate for patients aged less than 3 months and newborn infants.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

General Medicine,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health

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