Abstract

BackgroundAn influenza pandemic may increase Emergency Department attendance 7-fold. In the absence of a validated "flu score" to assess severity and assist triage decisions from primary into secondary care, current UK draft management recommendations have suggested the use of CURB-65 and chest X-ray as a proxy. We developed the Pandemic Medical Early Warning Score (PMEWS) to track and triage flu patients, taking into account physiological and social factors and without requiring laboratory or radiology services.MethodsValidation of the PMEWS score against an unselected group of patients presenting and admitted to an urban UK teaching hospital with community acquired pneumonia. Comparison of PMEWS performance against CURB-65 for three outcome measures: need for admission, admission to high dependency or intensive care, and inpatient mortality using area under ROC curve (AUROC) and the Hanley-McNeil method of comparison.ResultsPMEWS was a better predictor of need for admission (AUROC 0.944) and need of higher level of care (AUROC 0.83) compared with CURB-65 (AUROCs 0.881 and 0.640 respectively) but was not as good a predictor of subsequent inpatient mortality (AUROC 0.663).ConclusionAlthough further validation against other disease datasets as a proxy for pandemic flu is required, we show that PMEWS is rapidly applicable for triage of large numbers of flu patients to self-care, hospital admission or HDU/ICU care. It is scalable to reflect changing admission thresholds that will occur during a pandemic.

Highlights

  • IntroductionIn the absence of a validated "flu score" to assess severity and assist triage decisions from primary into secondary care, current UK draft management recommendations have suggested the use of CURB65 and chest X-ray as a proxy

  • An influenza pandemic may increase Emergency Department attendance 7-fold

  • We describe the first validation of the Pandemic Medical Early Warning Score (PMEWS) scoring system in an unselected population of patients with community acquired pneumonia presenting and admitted to our urban teaching hospital from February to December 2005

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Summary

Introduction

In the absence of a validated "flu score" to assess severity and assist triage decisions from primary into secondary care, current UK draft management recommendations have suggested the use of CURB65 and chest X-ray as a proxy. Examples include the British Thoracic Society's CURB-65, the American Thoracic Society guidelines[3] and the Pneumonia Severity Index[4] These have been validated as predictors of mortality in a population with community acquired pneumonia[5] and include either radiological or laboratory investigations. This renders them cumbersome and mandates hospitalbased assessment for a decision on the need for admission or discharge

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