JMIR Medical Informatics (Jun 2015)

A Web-Based Tool for Patient Triage in Emergency Department Settings: Validation Using the Emergency Severity Index

  • Elias, Pierre,
  • Damle, Ash,
  • Casale, Michael,
  • Branson, Kim,
  • Peterson, Nick,
  • Churi, Chaitanya,
  • Komatireddy, Ravi,
  • Feramisco, Jamison

DOI
https://doi.org/10.2196/medinform.3508
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 3, no. 2
p. e23

Abstract

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BackgroundWe evaluated the concordance between triage scores generated by a novel Internet clinical decision support tool, Clinical GPS (cGPS) (Lumiata Inc, San Mateo, CA), and the Emergency Severity Index (ESI), a well-established and clinically validated patient severity scale in use today. Although the ESI and cGPS use different underlying algorithms to calculate patient severity, both utilize a five-point integer scale with level 1 representing the highest severity. ObjectiveThe objective of this study was to compare cGPS results with an established gold standard in emergency triage. MethodsWe conducted a blinded trial comparing triage scores from the ESI: A Triage Tool for Emergency Department Care, Version 4, Implementation Handbook to those generated by cGPS from the text of 73 sample case vignettes. A weighted, quadratic kappa statistic was used to assess agreement between cGPS derived severity scores and those published in the ESI handbook for all 73 cases. Weighted kappa concordance was defined a priori as almost perfect (kappa > 0.8), substantial (0.6 < kappa < 0.8), moderate (0.4 < kappa < 0.6), fair (0.2 < kappa< 0.4), or slight (kappa < 0.2). ResultsOf the 73 case vignettes, the cGPS severity score matched the ESI handbook score in 95% of cases (69/73 cases), in addition, the weighted, quadratic kappa statistic showed almost perfect agreement (kappa = 0.93, 95% CI 0.854-0.996). In the subanalysis of 41 case vignettes assigned ESI scores of level 1 or 2, the cGPS and ESI severity scores matched in 95% of cases (39/41 cases). ConclusionsThese results indicate that the cGPS is a reliable indicator of triage severity, based on its comparison to a standardized index, the ESI. Future studies are needed to determine whether the cGPS can accurately assess the triage of patients in real clinical environments.