Pediatric early warning score versus a paediatric triage tool in the emergency department: A reliability study

Abstract Aim In the paediatric emergency department (PED), it is important to correctly prioritize children for physician assessment. The pediatric early warning score (PEWS), although not a triage tool, is often used for PED triage. The scandinavian Rapid Emergency Triage and Treatment System‐pedia...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Hanne Branes (Author), Anne Lee Solevåg (Author), Marianne Trygg Solberg (Author)
Format: Book
Published: Wiley, 2021-03-01T00:00:00Z.
Subjects:
Online Access:Connect to this object online.
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Description
Summary:Abstract Aim In the paediatric emergency department (PED), it is important to correctly prioritize children for physician assessment. The pediatric early warning score (PEWS), although not a triage tool, is often used for PED triage. The scandinavian Rapid Emergency Triage and Treatment System‐pediatric (RETTS‐p) is a reliability tested triage tool. We aimed to compare PEWS and RETTS‐p in a Norwegian PED. Design A reliability study. Methods The PED nurse routinely did PEWS observations, while the principal investigator concomitantly made RETTS‐p observations. Inter‐tool agreement was calculated for the complete PEWS and RETTS‐p and for vital signs scores, disregarding the RETTS‐p emergency symptoms and signs (ESS). Results Rapid Emergency Triage and Treatment System‐pediatric assigned a higher urgency than PEWS. The inter‐tool agreement between PEWS and RETTS‐p was low (weighted kappa [95% confidence interval [CI] = 0.32 [0.24-0.40]]). Weighted kappa (95% CI) was 0.50 (0.41-0.59) for PEWS and RETTS‐p without ESS, indicating that PEWS is not equivalent to five‐level triage tools.
Item Description:2054-1058
10.1002/nop2.675