Toloo Ghasem-Sam, Aitken Peter, Crilly Julia, FitzGerald Gerry
School of Public Health and Social Work, Queensland University of Technology, Victoria Park Road, Kelvin Grove, QLD, 4059, Australia.
Townsville Hospital Emergency Department, James Cook University, 1 James Cook Drive, Townsville, QLD, 4811, Australia.
Scand J Trauma Resusc Emerg Med. 2016 Oct 18;24(1):126. doi: 10.1186/s13049-016-0316-2.
Patients attending hospital emergency departments (ED) commonly cite the urgency and severity of their condition as the main reason for choosing the ED. However, the patients' perception of urgency and severity may be different to the nurses' perception of their urgency and severity, which is underpinned by their professional experience, knowledge, training and skills. This discordance may be a cause of patient dissatisfaction. The purpose of this study is to understand the extent of agreement/disagreement between the patient's perceived priority and actual triage category and associated factors.
A cross-sectional survey of 417 patients attending eight public hospital EDs in Queensland, Australia between March and May 2011 was conducted. The survey included patient's perceived priority and other health-related, socio-demographic and perceptual factors. Patients' triage category data were retrieved from their ED records and linked back to their survey data. Descriptive and multinomial logistic regression analyses were used.
Over 48 % of the respondents expected to be given higher priority than the actual triage category they were assigned; 31 % had their perceived priority matched with the triage category; and 20 % of the respondents expected a lower priority than the triage category they received (Kappa 0.07, p < 0.01). Patients who expected a higher priority tended to be more frequent users (≥3 times in the past six months), and to score higher on perceived seriousness, perceived urgency, and pain score compared to the patients whose perceived priority matched the triage category or anticipated a lower priority. In the multivariate analysis, only perceived urgency remained significantly associated with expected higher priority (OR = 1.27, 95 % CI: 1.14-1.43).
Our findings clearly confirmed the discrepancy between patient perception of urgency and staff assessment of urgency. This can have important implications particularly for the patients who underrate the urgency of their condition. Improved and open communication and the incorporation of the 'patient voice' into the triage process require understanding the patient's perspectives and their involvement in the decision making process.
Noted differences between patient and practitioner perception of clinical urgency were identifed in this study.
前往医院急诊科(ED)就诊的患者通常将自身病情的紧迫性和严重性作为选择急诊科的主要原因。然而,患者对紧迫性和严重性的认知可能与护士基于专业经验、知识、培训和技能所做出的对其紧迫性和严重性的认知有所不同。这种不一致可能是导致患者不满的一个原因。本研究的目的是了解患者感知的优先级与实际分诊类别之间的一致/不一致程度及相关因素。
对2011年3月至5月期间在澳大利亚昆士兰州8家公立医院急诊科就诊的417名患者进行了横断面调查。该调查包括患者感知的优先级以及其他与健康相关、社会人口统计学和感知方面的因素。患者的分诊类别数据从其急诊记录中获取,并与他们的调查数据相关联。采用了描述性和多项逻辑回归分析。
超过48%的受访者期望得到比他们实际被分配的分诊类别更高的优先级;31%的受访者感知的优先级与分诊类别相匹配;20%的受访者期望得到比他们所接受的分诊类别更低的优先级(Kappa值为0.07,p<0.01)。与感知优先级与分诊类别相匹配或期望更低优先级的患者相比,期望更高优先级的患者往往是更频繁的就诊者(过去六个月内≥3次),并且在感知严重性、感知紧迫性和疼痛评分方面得分更高。在多变量分析中,只有感知紧迫性仍然与期望更高优先级显著相关(OR = 1.27,95% CI:1.14 - 1.43)。
我们的研究结果清楚地证实了患者对紧迫性的认知与工作人员对紧迫性的评估之间存在差异。这可能具有重要影响,特别是对于那些低估自身病情紧迫性的患者。改善并开放沟通以及将“患者声音”纳入分诊过程需要了解患者的观点及其在决策过程中的参与。
本研究发现了患者与从业者对临床紧迫性的认知之间存在显著差异。