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Major incident triage: development and validation of a modified primary triage tool

Introduction A key principle in the effective management of a major incident is triage, prioritising patients on the basis of their clinical acuity. However, existing methods of primary major incident triage demonstrate poor performance at identifying the Priority One patient in need of a life-sav...

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Main Author: Vassallo, James M A
Other Authors: Smith, Jason E
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Division of Emergency Medicine 2019
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access_status_str Open Access
author Vassallo, James M A
author2 Smith, Jason E
author_browse Smith, Jason E
Vassallo, James M A
author_facet Smith, Jason E
Vassallo, James M A
author_sort Vassallo, James M A
collection Thesis
description Introduction A key principle in the effective management of a major incident is triage, prioritising patients on the basis of their clinical acuity. However, existing methods of primary major incident triage demonstrate poor performance at identifying the Priority One patient in need of a life-saving intervention. The aim of this thesis was to derive an improved triage tool. Methods The first part of the thesis defined what constitutes a life-saving intervention. Then using a retrospective military cohort, the optimum physiological thresholds for identifying the need for life-saving intervention were determined; the combination of which was used to define the Modified Physiological Triage Tool (MPTT). The MPTT was validated using a large civilian trauma database and a prospective military cohort. Subsequently, to describe the safety profile of the MPTT, an analysis of the implications of under-triage was undertaken. Finally, pragmatic changes were made to the MPTT (MPTT-24) - in order to provide a more useable method of primary triage. Statistical analysis was conducted using sensitivities and specificities, with triage tool performance compared using a McNemar test. Results 32 interventions were considered life-saving and the optimum physiological thresholds to identify these were a GCS <14, 12 < RR <22 and a HR < 100. Within both the military and civilian populations, the MPTT outperformed all existing methods of triage with the greatest sensitivity and lowest rates of under-triage, but at the expense of over-triage. Applying pragmatic changes, the MPTT-24 had comparable performance to the MPTT and continued to outperform existing methods. Conclusion The priority of primary major incident triage is to identify patients in need of life-saving intervention and to minimise under-triage. Fulfilling these priorities, the MPTT-24 outperforms existing methods of triage and its use is recommended as an alternative to existing methods of primary major incident triage. The MPTT-24 also offers a theoretical reduction in time required to triage and uses a simplified conscious level assessment, thus allowing it to be used by less experienced providers.
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license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2019
publishDateRange 2019
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source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/29232 Major incident triage: development and validation of a modified primary triage tool Vassallo, James M A Smith, Jason E Wallis, Lee A Emergency Medicine Introduction A key principle in the effective management of a major incident is triage, prioritising patients on the basis of their clinical acuity. However, existing methods of primary major incident triage demonstrate poor performance at identifying the Priority One patient in need of a life-saving intervention. The aim of this thesis was to derive an improved triage tool. Methods The first part of the thesis defined what constitutes a life-saving intervention. Then using a retrospective military cohort, the optimum physiological thresholds for identifying the need for life-saving intervention were determined; the combination of which was used to define the Modified Physiological Triage Tool (MPTT). The MPTT was validated using a large civilian trauma database and a prospective military cohort. Subsequently, to describe the safety profile of the MPTT, an analysis of the implications of under-triage was undertaken. Finally, pragmatic changes were made to the MPTT (MPTT-24) - in order to provide a more useable method of primary triage. Statistical analysis was conducted using sensitivities and specificities, with triage tool performance compared using a McNemar test. Results 32 interventions were considered life-saving and the optimum physiological thresholds to identify these were a GCS <14, 12 < RR <22 and a HR < 100. Within both the military and civilian populations, the MPTT outperformed all existing methods of triage with the greatest sensitivity and lowest rates of under-triage, but at the expense of over-triage. Applying pragmatic changes, the MPTT-24 had comparable performance to the MPTT and continued to outperform existing methods. Conclusion The priority of primary major incident triage is to identify patients in need of life-saving intervention and to minimise under-triage. Fulfilling these priorities, the MPTT-24 outperforms existing methods of triage and its use is recommended as an alternative to existing methods of primary major incident triage. The MPTT-24 also offers a theoretical reduction in time required to triage and uses a simplified conscious level assessment, thus allowing it to be used by less experienced providers. 2019-02-04T11:37:23Z 2019-02-04T11:37:23Z 2018 2019-02-04T07:10:12Z Doctoral Thesis Doctoral PhD http://hdl.handle.net/11427/29232 eng application/pdf Division of Emergency Medicine Faculty of Health Sciences University of Cape Town
spellingShingle Emergency Medicine
Vassallo, James M A
Major incident triage: development and validation of a modified primary triage tool
thesis_degree_str Doctoral
title Major incident triage: development and validation of a modified primary triage tool
title_full Major incident triage: development and validation of a modified primary triage tool
title_fullStr Major incident triage: development and validation of a modified primary triage tool
title_full_unstemmed Major incident triage: development and validation of a modified primary triage tool
title_short Major incident triage: development and validation of a modified primary triage tool
title_sort major incident triage development and validation of a modified primary triage tool
topic Emergency Medicine
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/29232
work_keys_str_mv AT vassallojamesma majorincidenttriagedevelopmentandvalidationofamodifiedprimarytriagetool