Todd K H, Hoffman J R, Morgan M T
Department of Surgery, Emory University School of Medicine, Atlanta, GA, USA.
Ann Emerg Med. 1996 Jan;27(1):16-21. doi: 10.1016/s0196-0644(96)70290-1.
To determine the effect of cardiology review of ECGs on emergency department practice.
We carried out a prospective cohort study at an urban teaching ED. Our subjects were adult patients undergoing electrocardiography. We prospectively collected 1,000 consecutive ECGs and classified them by severity according to the following system: class 1, normal or minor abnormalities only; class 2, abnormalities with potential to alter case management; and class 3, potentially life-threatening abnormalities. Actual ECG readings by ED physicians (who had access to computerized interpretations at the time of treatment) were compared with those of staff cardiology quality-assurance reviewers; if they were not in agreement, an expert cardiology panel blindly chose the superior interpretation. Subsequently, an expert emergency physician panel reviewed discordant readings for discharged patients to determine the need for further action.
Of 1,000 ECGs, the readings for 190 (19%) were significantly discordant. The expert cardiology panel preferred the ED reading in 72 cases (38%) and the staff cardiology reading in 118 (62%). In 30 other cases no ED reading was recorded in the medical record. Of the 148 cases in which the expert cardiology panel agreed with the cardiology reading or there was no ED reading, 102 patients were admitted and 46 discharged. Of the 46 discharges, 8 cardiology readings were categorized as class 1, leaving only 38 cases in which the staff cardiology reading might have affected the ED decision to discharge a patient. All of these readings were in class 2, with the exception of one unclassifiable diagnosis. There were no class 3 readings. On expert emergency physician panel review of these 38 ECGs and interpretations, only 8 (.8%, 95% confidence interval, .3% to 1.6%) were considered sufficiently important to warrant chart review. In actual practice, none of these cases was affected by the ECG quality-assurance (QA) process. Two of these patients died during our 1-year follow-up. In one of these cases, the ECG QA process could have altered the patient's outcome.
The existing ECG review process as mandated by the Joint Commission on Accreditation of Healthcare Organizations (JCAHO) will likely have minimal influence on patient outcomes at our institution. We should establish the effectiveness of this mandated QA process before committing scarce resources to its performance.
确定心电图的心脏病学审查对急诊科实践的影响。
我们在一家城市教学医院的急诊科开展了一项前瞻性队列研究。研究对象为接受心电图检查的成年患者。我们前瞻性地收集了连续1000份心电图,并根据以下系统按严重程度进行分类:1级,仅为正常或轻微异常;2级,有可能改变病例管理的异常;3级,潜在危及生命的异常。将急诊科医生(在治疗时可获取计算机化解读结果)的实际心电图读数与心脏病学质量保证审查人员的读数进行比较;若两者不一致,则由心脏病学专家小组在不知情的情况下选择更优的解读。随后,一个急诊医学专家小组对出院患者的不一致读数进行审查,以确定是否需要进一步采取行动。
在1000份心电图中,有190份(19%)的读数存在显著差异。心脏病学专家小组在72例(38%)中更倾向于急诊科的读数,在118例(62%)中更倾向于心内科审查人员的读数。在另外30例中,病历中未记录急诊科的读数。在心脏病学专家小组同意心内科读数或无急诊科读数的148例中,102例患者入院,46例出院。在46例出院患者中,8份心内科读数被归类为1级,因此只有38例中心内科审查人员的读数可能影响了急诊科的出院决定。除了一个无法分类的诊断外,所有这些读数均为2级。没有3级读数。经急诊医学专家小组对这38份心电图及其解读进行审查,只有8份(0.8%,95%置信区间为0.3%至1.6%)被认为非常重要,值得进行病历复查。在实际临床实践中,这些病例均未受心电图质量保证(QA)流程的影响。在我们为期1年的随访中,其中2例患者死亡。在其中1例中,心电图QA流程本可改变患者的结局。
医疗保健组织认证联合委员会(JCAHO)规定的现有心电图审查流程可能对我们机构的患者结局影响极小。在投入稀缺资源执行这一规定的QA流程之前,我们应确定其有效性。