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A Nationwide Survey of Korean Emergency Department Triage Systems and Scales

8 de julio de 2013 actualizado por: Joonbum Park, Hanyang University

A Nationwide Survey of Korean Emergency Department Triage Systems and Scales; a First Step Towards Korean Triage and Acuity Scale(KTAS)

As a first step towards reform of the emergency medical service system by standardizing triage scale to Korean Triage and Acuity Scale(KTAS), we aimed to assess the present status of our emergency department triage systems and illustrated the present status and problems of the Korean emergency department triage system.

Descripción general del estudio

Estado

Terminado

Condiciones

Descripción detallada

Study design In Korea, EDs are classified into 4 levels, 21 4th degree regional EDs, 115 3rd degree local EDs, 323 2nd degree local emergency facilities and 132 1st degree other emergency facilities. Korea is divided into 21 medical regions according to access to hospitals, the population of cities and their areas. A regional ED is located in each medical region. There is a local ED for every million people in metropolitan areas, and every five hundred thousand peoples in other cities. The investigators selected all 4th and 3rd degree EDs in Korea (21 regional and 115 local EDs; at Dec 31, 2011). The triage systems of these EDs are qualified and controlled by the National Emergency Medicine Center. The investigators conducted a telephone and e-mail survey of triage officers from September 4 to November 27, 2012. The name of each center was identified from the 2011 Annual Report of Korean Emergency Medicine, which included the phone number of each ED.6) Initially, an EM specialist telephoned the nurse manager of all EDs and explained the purpose of the survey. He then selected a triage officer from each ED who had worked in the emergency department for more than 3 years. The interviewer first asked them whether they wanted a telephone interview or the e-mail survey. 102 EDs chose the telephone interview, in which the interviewer read the questions and noted the answers on the survey sheet in a standard order to prevent interviewer bias. The investigators instructed the interviewer not to change the wording or content of any survey question; however if a respondent did not understand the meaning of a word, the interviewer was allowed to explain it. Thirty four EDs wanted to answer by e-mail, and the investigators sent the survey form to them. If the answer did not arrive after a week, the investigators sent the same e-mail again, and after two weeks the investigators called the respondent again. In 4 cases the nurse manager of an ED or the triage officer declined to answer the survey him/herself for security reasons. In those cases, the investigators contacted the hospital administrator and asked him or her to forward an e-mail to the ED triage officer or nurse manager.

Data collection and processing The survey instrument was revised by 6 emergency medicine departments of 2 institutions. (The survey instrument is posted in online as a supplementary file). Data collected included identification of respondents, actual usage of separate triage rooms, occupations of triage officers, presence of documented triage scales, type of triage scale, triage officer's opinion about the problem of his own triage scale, education for the triage officers, and the process of reviewing their triage scales.

The investigators used SPSS 18 (IBM SPSS Inc., Chicago, Illinois, USA) for data management and analysis. The investigators compared characteristics of the regional EDs with those of local EDs and examined aspects of the ED triage systems such as frequency of use of the triage room, occupation of the triage officer and so on. The investigators compared the features of EDs with verified triage scales and those with unverified triage scales, and assessed the quality control of the EDs by asking about education for triage, and verification of the triage scale. This research was reviewed by the University of Hanyang institutional review board and was exempted from written informed consent. Survey respondents were informed that their participation was voluntary and that the results of the survey would be kept confidential.

Tipo de estudio

De observación

Inscripción (Actual)

136

Contactos y Ubicaciones

Esta sección proporciona los datos de contacto de quienes realizan el estudio e información sobre dónde se lleva a cabo este estudio.

Ubicaciones de estudio

Criterios de participación

Los investigadores buscan personas que se ajusten a una determinada descripción, denominada criterio de elegibilidad. Algunos ejemplos de estos criterios son el estado de salud general de una persona o tratamientos previos.

Criterio de elegibilidad

Edades elegibles para estudiar

  • Niño
  • Adulto
  • Adulto Mayor

Acepta Voluntarios Saludables

No

Géneros elegibles para el estudio

Todos

Método de muestreo

Muestra no probabilística

Población de estudio

triage officers of 136 emergency centers in Korea

Descripción

Inclusion Criteria:

  • consent to survey

Exclusion Criteria:

  • not consent to survey

Plan de estudios

Esta sección proporciona detalles del plan de estudio, incluido cómo está diseñado el estudio y qué mide el estudio.

¿Cómo está diseñado el estudio?

Detalles de diseño

Cohortes e Intervenciones

Grupo / Cohorte
Regional emergency centers
Local emergency centers

¿Qué mide el estudio?

Medidas de resultado primarias

Medida de resultado
Periodo de tiempo
Emergency departments which have verified triage scales.
Periodo de tiempo: Sep, 2012-Nov, 2012
Sep, 2012-Nov, 2012

Colaboradores e Investigadores

Aquí es donde encontrará personas y organizaciones involucradas en este estudio.

Patrocinador

Fechas de registro del estudio

Estas fechas rastrean el progreso del registro del estudio y los envíos de resultados resumidos a ClinicalTrials.gov. Los registros del estudio y los resultados informados son revisados ​​por la Biblioteca Nacional de Medicina (NLM) para asegurarse de que cumplan con los estándares de control de calidad específicos antes de publicarlos en el sitio web público.

Fechas importantes del estudio

Inicio del estudio

1 de septiembre de 2012

Finalización primaria (Actual)

1 de noviembre de 2012

Finalización del estudio (Actual)

1 de marzo de 2013

Fechas de registro del estudio

Enviado por primera vez

2 de julio de 2013

Primero enviado que cumplió con los criterios de control de calidad

8 de julio de 2013

Publicado por primera vez (Estimar)

11 de julio de 2013

Actualizaciones de registros de estudio

Última actualización publicada (Estimar)

11 de julio de 2013

Última actualización enviada que cumplió con los criterios de control de calidad

8 de julio de 2013

Última verificación

1 de julio de 2013

Más información

Términos relacionados con este estudio

Términos MeSH relevantes adicionales

Otros números de identificación del estudio

  • jesumania

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