A prospective study that compared a traditional emergency department (ED) triage protocol with an expedited protocol was conducted to determine if minimizing the subjectivity of nursing triage would result in more efficient management of adult patients presenting with nontraumatic chest pain. The traditional protocol triaged 382 patients into 1 of 5 categories of acuity. The expedited study group (418 patients) were triaged as usual but subsequently were treated as if they were triage category 1 or 2 (medical evaluation within 15 minutes of arrival). Traditional triage led to 40% of acute myocardial infarction (AMI) patients being triaged into inappropriately low-acuity categories. The expedited protocol resulted in significant improvement in the following intervals: ED arrival to triage, triage to cubicle, ED arrival to cubicle, ED arrival to electrocardiogram (ECG) ordered, ED arrival to ECG available, ED arrival to physician evaluation, and ED arrival to decision to thrombolyse. Study patients with non-AMI cardiac chest pain and AMI cardiac chest pain were evaluated by a physician an average of 12 minutes and 8 minutes after ED arrival, respectively. Delays in interdepartmental processes, such as ECG-technician responsiveness, thrombolysis protocol fulfillment and thrombolytic agent delivery, negated benefits derived from improvements in internal processes. Effective coordination of the numerous processes involved in the initial ED management of adult patients with nontraumatic chest pain is required to make thrombolytic therapy for AMI within 30 minutes of patient arrival a routinely achievable goal.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/0735-6757(93)90004-u | DOI Listing |
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