Under-triage in telephone consultation is related to non-normative symptom description and interpersonal communication: a mixed methods study

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Standard

Under-triage in telephone consultation is related to non-normative symptom description and interpersonal communication : a mixed methods study. / Gamst-Jensen, Hejdi; Lippert, Freddy K; Egerod, Ingrid.

In: Scandinavian Journal of Trauma, Resuscitation and Emergency Medicine, Vol. 25, 52, 15.05.2017.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Gamst-Jensen, H, Lippert, FK & Egerod, I 2017, 'Under-triage in telephone consultation is related to non-normative symptom description and interpersonal communication: a mixed methods study', Scandinavian Journal of Trauma, Resuscitation and Emergency Medicine, vol. 25, 52. https://doi.org/10.1186/s13049-017-0390-0

APA

Gamst-Jensen, H., Lippert, F. K., & Egerod, I. (2017). Under-triage in telephone consultation is related to non-normative symptom description and interpersonal communication: a mixed methods study. Scandinavian Journal of Trauma, Resuscitation and Emergency Medicine, 25, [52]. https://doi.org/10.1186/s13049-017-0390-0

Vancouver

Gamst-Jensen H, Lippert FK, Egerod I. Under-triage in telephone consultation is related to non-normative symptom description and interpersonal communication: a mixed methods study. Scandinavian Journal of Trauma, Resuscitation and Emergency Medicine. 2017 May 15;25. 52. https://doi.org/10.1186/s13049-017-0390-0

Author

Gamst-Jensen, Hejdi ; Lippert, Freddy K ; Egerod, Ingrid. / Under-triage in telephone consultation is related to non-normative symptom description and interpersonal communication : a mixed methods study. In: Scandinavian Journal of Trauma, Resuscitation and Emergency Medicine. 2017 ; Vol. 25.

Bibtex

@article{9638bf401bf642a88c8e467a11224754,
title = "Under-triage in telephone consultation is related to non-normative symptom description and interpersonal communication: a mixed methods study",
abstract = "BACKGROUND: Telephone consultation and triage are used to limit the workload on emergency departments. Lack of visual cues and clinical tests put telephone consultations to a disadvantage compared to face-to-face consultations increasing the risk of under-triage. Under-triage occurs in telephone triage; however why under-triage happens is not explored yet. The aim of the study was to describe situations of under-triage in context, to assess the quality of under-triaged calls, and to identify communication patterns contributing to under-triage in a regional OOH service in the capital region of Denmark.METHODS: Explanatory simultaneous mixed method with thematic analysis and descriptive statistics was chosen. The study was carried out in an Out-Of-Hours service (OOH) in the Capital Region of Denmark, Copenhagen. Under-triage was defined as Potentially Under-Triaged Calls (PUTC) by specific criteria to an OOH Hotline, and identification by integration of three databases: Medical Hotline database, Emergency number database, including the Ambulance database, and electronic patient records. Distribution of PUTC were carried out using ICD-10 codes to identify diagnosis and main themes identified by qualitative analysis of audio recorded under-triaged calls. Study period was October 15(th) to November 30(th) 2014.RESULTS: Three hundred twenty seven PUTC were identified, representing 0.04% of all calls (n = 937.056) to the OOH. Distribution of PUTC according to diagnoses was: digestive (24%), circulatory (19%), respiratory (15%) and all others (42%). Thematic analysis of the voice logs suggested that inadequate communication and non-normative symptom description contributed to under-triage.DISCUSSION: The incidence of potentially under-triage is low (0.04%). However, the over-representation of digestive, circulatory, and respiratory diagnoses might suggest that under-triage is related to inadequate symptom description. We recommend that caller and call-handler collaborate systematically on problem identification and negotiate non-normative symptom description.CONCLUSION: The incidence of under-triage is low (0.04%). However, the over-representation of digestive, circulatory, and respiratory diagnoses might suggest that under-triage is related to inadequate symptom description. We recommend that caller and call-handler collaborate systematically on problem identification and negotiate non-normative symptom description.",
keywords = "Journal Article",
author = "Hejdi Gamst-Jensen and Lippert, {Freddy K} and Ingrid Egerod",
year = "2017",
month = may,
day = "15",
doi = "10.1186/s13049-017-0390-0",
language = "English",
volume = "25",
journal = "Scandinavian Journal of Trauma, Resuscitation and Emergency Medicine",
issn = "1757-7241",
publisher = "BioMed Central",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Under-triage in telephone consultation is related to non-normative symptom description and interpersonal communication

T2 - a mixed methods study

AU - Gamst-Jensen, Hejdi

AU - Lippert, Freddy K

AU - Egerod, Ingrid

PY - 2017/5/15

Y1 - 2017/5/15

N2 - BACKGROUND: Telephone consultation and triage are used to limit the workload on emergency departments. Lack of visual cues and clinical tests put telephone consultations to a disadvantage compared to face-to-face consultations increasing the risk of under-triage. Under-triage occurs in telephone triage; however why under-triage happens is not explored yet. The aim of the study was to describe situations of under-triage in context, to assess the quality of under-triaged calls, and to identify communication patterns contributing to under-triage in a regional OOH service in the capital region of Denmark.METHODS: Explanatory simultaneous mixed method with thematic analysis and descriptive statistics was chosen. The study was carried out in an Out-Of-Hours service (OOH) in the Capital Region of Denmark, Copenhagen. Under-triage was defined as Potentially Under-Triaged Calls (PUTC) by specific criteria to an OOH Hotline, and identification by integration of three databases: Medical Hotline database, Emergency number database, including the Ambulance database, and electronic patient records. Distribution of PUTC were carried out using ICD-10 codes to identify diagnosis and main themes identified by qualitative analysis of audio recorded under-triaged calls. Study period was October 15(th) to November 30(th) 2014.RESULTS: Three hundred twenty seven PUTC were identified, representing 0.04% of all calls (n = 937.056) to the OOH. Distribution of PUTC according to diagnoses was: digestive (24%), circulatory (19%), respiratory (15%) and all others (42%). Thematic analysis of the voice logs suggested that inadequate communication and non-normative symptom description contributed to under-triage.DISCUSSION: The incidence of potentially under-triage is low (0.04%). However, the over-representation of digestive, circulatory, and respiratory diagnoses might suggest that under-triage is related to inadequate symptom description. We recommend that caller and call-handler collaborate systematically on problem identification and negotiate non-normative symptom description.CONCLUSION: The incidence of under-triage is low (0.04%). However, the over-representation of digestive, circulatory, and respiratory diagnoses might suggest that under-triage is related to inadequate symptom description. We recommend that caller and call-handler collaborate systematically on problem identification and negotiate non-normative symptom description.

AB - BACKGROUND: Telephone consultation and triage are used to limit the workload on emergency departments. Lack of visual cues and clinical tests put telephone consultations to a disadvantage compared to face-to-face consultations increasing the risk of under-triage. Under-triage occurs in telephone triage; however why under-triage happens is not explored yet. The aim of the study was to describe situations of under-triage in context, to assess the quality of under-triaged calls, and to identify communication patterns contributing to under-triage in a regional OOH service in the capital region of Denmark.METHODS: Explanatory simultaneous mixed method with thematic analysis and descriptive statistics was chosen. The study was carried out in an Out-Of-Hours service (OOH) in the Capital Region of Denmark, Copenhagen. Under-triage was defined as Potentially Under-Triaged Calls (PUTC) by specific criteria to an OOH Hotline, and identification by integration of three databases: Medical Hotline database, Emergency number database, including the Ambulance database, and electronic patient records. Distribution of PUTC were carried out using ICD-10 codes to identify diagnosis and main themes identified by qualitative analysis of audio recorded under-triaged calls. Study period was October 15(th) to November 30(th) 2014.RESULTS: Three hundred twenty seven PUTC were identified, representing 0.04% of all calls (n = 937.056) to the OOH. Distribution of PUTC according to diagnoses was: digestive (24%), circulatory (19%), respiratory (15%) and all others (42%). Thematic analysis of the voice logs suggested that inadequate communication and non-normative symptom description contributed to under-triage.DISCUSSION: The incidence of potentially under-triage is low (0.04%). However, the over-representation of digestive, circulatory, and respiratory diagnoses might suggest that under-triage is related to inadequate symptom description. We recommend that caller and call-handler collaborate systematically on problem identification and negotiate non-normative symptom description.CONCLUSION: The incidence of under-triage is low (0.04%). However, the over-representation of digestive, circulatory, and respiratory diagnoses might suggest that under-triage is related to inadequate symptom description. We recommend that caller and call-handler collaborate systematically on problem identification and negotiate non-normative symptom description.

KW - Journal Article

U2 - 10.1186/s13049-017-0390-0

DO - 10.1186/s13049-017-0390-0

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 28506282

VL - 25

JO - Scandinavian Journal of Trauma, Resuscitation and Emergency Medicine

JF - Scandinavian Journal of Trauma, Resuscitation and Emergency Medicine

SN - 1757-7241

M1 - 52

ER -

ID: 180548770