Abstract

ObjectiveMis-triage may have serious consequences for patients in mass casualty incidents (MCI) at sea. The purpose of this study was to assess outcome, reliability and validity of an analogue and a digital recording system for triage of a MCI at sea.MethodsThe study based on a triage exercise conducted with a cross-over-design. Forty-eight volunteers were presented a fictional MCI with 50 cases. The volunteers were randomly assigned to start with the analogue (Group A, starting with the analogue followed by the digital system) or digital system (Group B, starting with the digital followed by the analogue system). Triage score distribution and agreement between the triage methods and a predefined standard were reported. Reliability was analysed using Cronbach’s Alpha and Cohen’s Kappa. Validity was measured through sensitivity, specificity and predictive value. Treatment, period and carry-over-effects were analysed using a linear mixed-effects model.ResultsThe number of patients triaged (total: n = 3545) with the analogue system (n = 1914; 79.75%) was significantly higher (p = 0.001) than with the digital system (n = 1631; 67.96%). A trend towards a higher percentage of correct triages with the digital system was observed (p = 0.282). Ratio of under-triage was significantly smaller with the digital system (p = 0.001). Validity measured with Cronbach’s Alpha and Cohen’s Kappa was higher with the digital system. So was sensitivity (category; green: 80.67%, yellow: 73.24%, red: 83.54%; analogue: green: 93.28%, yellow: 82.36%, red: 94.04%) and specificity of the digital system (green: 78.07%, yellow: 63.75%, red: 66.25%; analogue: green: 85.50%, yellow: 79.88%, red: 91.50%). Comparing the predictive values and accuracy, the digital system showed higher scores than the analogue system. No significant patterns of carry-over-effects were observed.ConclusionsSignificant differences were found for the number of triages comparing the analogue and digital recording system. The digital system has a slightly higher reliability and validity than the analogue triage system.

Highlights

  • A Mass Casualty Incident (MCI) is an overwhelming event with more patients at the same time than locally available resources can manage using routine procedures

  • Ratio of under-triage was significantly smaller with the digital system (p = 0.001)

  • Significant differences were found for the number of triages comparing the analogue and digital recording system

Read more

Summary

Introduction

A Mass Casualty Incident (MCI) is an overwhelming event with more patients at the same time than locally available resources can manage using routine procedures. It requires exceptional emergency response and additional, extraordinary support [1]. The purpose of triage is to prioritize treatment to use the existing medical, material and human resources efficiently following the principle of "giving best possible care for as many patients as possible". The use of triage algorithms allows the identification of critically injured patients and the determination of the need for immediate treatment [7]. Injury severity is often misjudged [5]

Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call