Enhancing Triage Accuracy: A Clinical Audit of the Manchester Triage System Implementation
- Conditions
- Triage
- Interventions
- Other: Educational training of ER Nurses
- Registration Number
- NCT05944406
- Lead Sponsor
- Rawalpindi Medical College
- Brief Summary
This clinical audit focused on improving how patients are prioritized and managed in the emergency department. The audit took place in a hospital in Rawalpindi and involved two cycles of data collection. The results showed that after an educational intervention, there was an improvement in accurately triaging patients and a decrease in cases that were categorized as urgent when they were not. The audit also revealed a decrease in non-urgent cases visiting the emergency department. The findings highlight the importance of proper training, following triage guidelines, and referring non-urgent cases to other departments. The suggestions include improving the triage process and making the emergency department more efficient for better patient care.
- Detailed Description
This clinical audit aimed to assess the accuracy and effectiveness of the Manchester Triage System (MTS) implementation in a hospital's emergency department. The audit took place in Medical Unit I of Benazir Bhutto Hospital, Rawalpindi, over two cycles from March to June 2023.
The hospital, affiliated with Rawalpindi Medical University, is a 750-bed tertiary care facility located in a busy city. The emergency department, equipped with approximately 91 beds, follows triage guidelines established by the hospital. The triage process involves categorizing patients based on their presenting problem and determining the time within which they should be evaluated and treated by a doctor.
To conduct the audit, certain standards were set before assessing the triage process. These included ensuring guidelines on patient categorization into triage categories, using a standard triage box in the patient record sheet, setting waiting time limits for each category, and using the discharge diagnosis of the doctor as a benchmark for triage accuracy.
The audit involved two cycles: the first from March to April 2023 and the second from May to June 2023. Convenience sampling was used to select a sample size of 256 patients for the first cycle and 238 patients for the second cycle. Data collection involved recording patient demographics, registration and consultation times, triage categories assigned by the triage nurse, admission decisions, and independent assessment of triage accuracy by a pair of doctors.
After completing the first cycle, an educational intervention was conducted with the triage nurses, providing detailed explanations on accurate usage of the MTS and instructing them to refer non-urgent cases to the outpatient department or the Casualty Medical Officer. Circulars containing instructions regarding MTS usage were also distributed. The second cycle was then conducted, following the same data collection procedure.
Recruitment & Eligibility
- Status
- COMPLETED
- Sex
- All
- Target Recruitment
- 494
- Patients who presented to the Emergency Department (ED) of Medical Unit I, Benazir Bhutto Hospital, Rawalpindi.
- Patients whose data was recorded and available for analysis.
- Patients of all age groups and genders.
- Patients who visited the ED during the specified audit cycles.
- Children (age<13 years)
- Patients whose data was incomplete or missing crucial information for analysis.
- Patients who were not seen by a doctor and did not receive a discharge diagnosis.
- Patients who visited the ED outside the specified audit cycles.
- Patients who were transferred to another facility before receiving triage or medical assessment.
Study & Design
- Study Type
- OBSERVATIONAL
- Study Design
- Not specified
- Arm && Interventions
Group Intervention Description Audit Cycle 2 Educational training of ER Nurses These are the patients included in the second cycle of the clinical audit, conducted after an educational intervention for the triage nurses. The study collected data from a sample of 238 patients who visited the same Medical Unit I of Benazir Bhutto Hospital, Rawalpindi. Similar to audit cycle 1, these patients were triaged using the MTS, and their demographic information, triage category, and admission decision were recorded. The study aimed to evaluate any improvements in triage accuracy and waiting times compared to audit cycle 1 after the intervention and training of the triage nurses.
- Primary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method The number of patients categorized into each triage category by the Triage Nurse 3 months The study aimed to assess how effectively the triage nurses in the Emergency Department (ED) of Benazir Bhutto Hospital, Rawalpindi, categorized patients into different triage categories based on their presenting symptoms. The triage decisions made by the triage nurses were compared with the triage decisions made by the emergency physicians, using the discharge diagnosis as a benchmark. The accuracy of triage was determined by evaluating whether the assigned triage category matched the severity of the patients' condition as indicated by the discharge diagnosis. The study focused on identifying cases of under-triage, over-triage, accurate triage, and un-triage to assess the overall effectiveness of the triage process and to identify areas for improvement.
The number of patients categorized into each triage category by the ER Physician 3 months The patients were categorized into triage categories by the ER Physician upon arrival to doctor (after triage from Triage counter, by the Triage Nurse). This triage was based on the discharge diagnosis and the ER Physician's evaluation.
- Secondary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Time between patient's arrival to ER and being attended to by the doctor (waiting time) for each triage category 3 months The waiting time each patient spent before they were attended to by the doctor was measured and recorded according to the triage category they belonged to.
Number of patients who presented to the ER with cases that didn't require emergency management 3 months A significant portion of the study focused on non-urgent cases that presented to the Emergency Department (ED). These non-urgent cases refer to patients whose medical conditions or symptoms did not require immediate or urgent medical attention. They were evaluated by two independent ER Physicians and labelled 'non-urgent' if they booth sufficiently believed this case required no emergency care and there was no jurgency to get checked by a doctor for the patient. Instead, these cases could have been appropriately managed in the outpatient setting, such as through scheduled appointments in clinics or primary care facilities
Trial Locations
- Locations (1)
Benazir Bhutto Hospital
🇵🇰Rawalpindi, Punjab, Pakistan