Major incident triage and the evaluation of the Triage Sort as a secondary triage method.

James Vassallo, Jason Smith
Author Information
  1. James Vassallo: Emergency Department, Derriford Hospital, Plymouth, UK. ORCID
  2. Jason Smith: Emergency Department, Derriford Hospital, Plymouth, UK. ORCID

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: A key principle in the effective management of major incidents is triage, the process of prioritising patients on the basis of their clinical acuity. In many countries including the UK, a two-stage approach to triage is practised, with primary triage at the scene followed by a more detailed assessment using a secondary triage process, the Triage Sort. To date, no studies have analysed the performance of the Triage Sort in the civilian setting. The primary aim of this study was to determine the performance of the Triage Sort at predicting the need for life-saving intervention (LSI).
METHODS: Using the Trauma Audit Research Network (TARN) database for all adult patients (18 years) between 2006 and 2014, we determined which patients received one or more LSIs using a previously defined list. The first recorded hospital physiology was used to categorise patient priority using the Triage Sort, National Ambulance Resilience Unit (NARU) Sieve and the Modified Physiological Triage Tool-24 (MPTT-24). Performance characteristics were evaluated using sensitivity and specificity with statistical analysis using a McNemar's test.
RESULTS: 127 233patients (58.1%) had complete data and were included: 55.6% men, aged 61.4 (IQR 43.1-80.0 years), ISS 9 (IQR 9-16), with 24 791 (19.5%) receiving at least one LSI (priority 1). The Triage Sort demonstrated the lowest accuracy of all triage tools at identifying the need for LSI (sensitivity 15.7% (95% CI 15.2 to 16.2) correlating with the highest rate of under-triage (84.3% (95% CI 83.8 to 84.8), but it had the greatest specificity (98.7% (95% CI 98.6 to 98.8).
CONCLUSION: Within a civilian Trauma registry population, the Triage Sort demonstrated the poorest performance at identifying patients in need of LSI. Its use as a secondary triage tool should be reviewed, with an urgent need for further research to determine the optimum method of secondary triage.

Keywords

MeSH Term

Adult
Aged
Aged, 80 and over
Female
Humans
Male
Mass Casualty Incidents
Middle Aged
Military Medicine
Registries
Retrospective Studies
Triage

Word Cloud

Created with Highcharts 10.0.0triageTriageSortusingpatientssecondaryneedLSImajorperformance95%CI898incidentsprocessprimaryciviliandetermineyearsoneprioritysensitivityspecificityIQRdemonstratedidentifying157%284methodINTRODUCTION:keyprincipleeffectivemanagementprioritisingbasisclinicalacuitymanycountriesincludingUKtwo-stageapproachpractisedscenefolloweddetailedassessmentdatestudiesanalysedsettingaimstudypredictinglife-savinginterventionMETHODS:UsingTraumaAuditResearchNetworkTARNdatabaseadult1820062014determinedreceivedLSIspreviouslydefinedlistfirstrecordedhospitalphysiologyusedcategorisepatientNationalAmbulanceResilienceUnitNARUSieveModifiedPhysiologicalTool-24MPTT-24PerformancecharacteristicsevaluatedstatisticalanalysisMcNemar'stestRESULTS:127 233patients581%completedataincluded:556%menaged614431-800ISS99-1624 791195%receivingleast1lowestaccuracytools16correlatinghighestrateunder-triage3%83greatest6CONCLUSION:WithintraumaregistrypopulationpoorestusetoolreviewedurgentresearchoptimumMajorincidentevaluationepidemiologyprehospitalcareincident/planning

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