Prospective study of pain and patient outcomes in the emergency department: a tale of two pain assessment methods

Author:

Ku Nai-Wen,Cheng Ming-Tai,Liew Chiat Qiao,Chen Yun Chang,Sung Chih-Wei,Ko Chia-Hsin,Lu Tsung-Chien,Huang Chien-Hua,Tsai Chu-LinORCID

Abstract

Abstract Background Accurate pain assessment is essential in the emergency department (ED) triage process. Overestimation of pain intensity, however, can lead to unnecessary overtriage. The study aimed to investigate the influence of pain on patient outcomes and how pain intensity modulates the triage’s predictive capabilities on these outcomes. Methods A prospective observational cohort study was conducted at a tertiary care hospital, enrolling adult patients in the triage station. The entire triage process was captured on video. Two pain assessment methods were employed: (1) Self-reported pain score in the Taiwan Triage and Acuity Scale, referred to as the system-based method; (2) Five physicians independently assigned triage levels and assessed pain scores from video footage, termed the physician-based method. The primary outcome was hospitalization, and secondary outcomes included ED length of stay (EDLOS) and ED charges. Results Of the 656 patients evaluated, the median self-reported pain score was 4 (interquartile range, 0–7), while the median physician-rated pain score was 1.5 (interquartile range, 0–3). Increased self-reported pain severity was not associated with prolonged EDLOS and increased ED charges, but a positive association was identified with physician-rated pain scores. Using the system-based method, the predictive efficacy of triage scales was lower in the pain groups than in the pain-free group (area under the receiver operating curve, [AUROC]: 0.615 vs. 0.637). However, with the physician-based method, triage scales were more effective in predicting hospitalization among patients with pain than those without (AUROC: 0.650 vs. 0.636). Conclusions Self-reported pain seemed to diminish the predictive accuracy of triage for hospitalization. In contrast, physician-rated pain scores were positively associated with longer EDLOS, increased ED charges, and enhanced triage predictive capability for hospitalization. Pain, therefore, appears to modulate the relationship between triage and patient outcomes, highlighting the need for careful pain evaluation in the ED.

Funder

Ministry of Science and Technology, Taiwan

College of Medicine, National Taiwan University

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Critical Care and Intensive Care Medicine,Emergency Medicine

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