J Korean Med Sci. 2017 Oct;32(10):1702-1707. English.
Published online Aug 28, 2017.
© 2017 The Korean Academy of Medical Sciences.
Original Article

Clinical Considerations When Applying Vital Signs in Pediatric Korean Triage and Acuity Scale

Bongjin Lee,1,2 Do Kyun Kim,1 June Dong Park,2 and Young Ho Kwak1,3
    • 1Department of Emergency Medicine, Seoul National University Hospital, Seoul, Korea.
    • 2Department of Pediatrics, Seoul National University College of Medicine, Seoul, Korea.
    • 3Department of Emergency Medicine, Seoul National University College of Medicine, Seoul, Korea.
Received April 19, 2017; Accepted July 15, 2017.

This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/) which permits unrestricted non-commercial use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

Abstract

Initial vital signs of children at the emergency department may be abnormal because of anxiety and irritability, resulting in unrealistic triage levels. This study aimed to evaluate the effectiveness of pediatric triage by clinical decision based on the patient's general condition. The Pediatric Korean Triage and Acuity Scale (PedKTAS) has been used nationwide for triage since 2016. The triage level, as assessed by an experienced triage nurse and based on the patient's clinical condition, was defined as the ‘real practice (RP)-level,’ while the re-calculated triage level, as assessed by the direct application of initial vital signs, was defined as the ‘simulation (S)-level.’ A total of 22,841 patients were triaged during the study period. The hospitalization rate according to RP-PedKTAS levels exhibited a significant correlation with the expected hospitalization rate suggested by the Pediatric Canadian Triage and Acuity Scale (CTAS) (P = 0.002), whereas the S-PedKTAS levels did not (P = 0.151). Compared with the previously reported pediatric CTAS level-specific hospitalization rate and intensive care unit (ICU) admission rate, RP-PedKTAS was significantly correlated with both hospitalization rate and ICU admission rate (P = 0.001 and P = 0.012, respectively). However, S-PedKTAS showed no significant correlation in both (P = 0.267 and P = 0.188, respectively). The determination of triage levels based on clinical decision rather than the direct application of abnormal initial vital signs to PedKTAS is more accurate in predicting the hospitalization rate and ICU admission rate.

Graphical Abstract

Keywords
Children; Emergency Department; Triage; Pediatric Korean Triage and Acuity Scale

INTRODUCTION

The Korean Triage and Acuity Scale (KTAS) was developed in 2012 based on the Canadian Triage and Acuity Scale (CTAS), with modifications to adapt it to the Korean medical environment (1, 2). After the completion of a pilot study, KTAS was introduced and mandated in all emergency departments (EDs) throughout the country on January 1, 2016. KTAS is divided into adult and pediatric KTAS (PedKTAS) at the age of 15 years (2).

Initial vital signs are recommended in assessing the level of PedKTAS (2); however, limitations have been noted when using the initial vital signs to determine the triage levels in children. Because children who are placed in unfamiliar environments become anxious and irritable, this effect may cause a shift of vital signs beyond the normal range (3, 4, 5). Therefore, although a child may have a non-emergent condition, the level of severity may seem to be higher when his or her initial vital signs are applied directly to determine the triage levels.

This incorrect ‘over-triage’ can lead to overcrowding of the pediatric ED with an increased length of stay, unnecessary utilization of medical resources, increased medical costs, and potential threats to patients' safety (4, 6, 7). Therefore, a nationwide controversy has emerged regarding whether the vital signs of children should be directly applied to PedKTAS or whether a modified interpretation of vital signs should be used. The pediatric CTAS guideline suggests that even if the patient's vital signs are measured to be abnormal, such as tachycardia in upset child, triaging lower than the measured abnormal vital signs can be done with careful clinical decision (5). Furthermore, a retrospective cohort study using the Japanese Triage and Acuity Scale based on CTAS also demonstrated that patients who were down-triaged (assignment of lower triage level) by clinical decision based on the patient's general condition had better predictability for the disposition from the pediatric ED (4).

The aim of this study was to determine the effectiveness of the triage method based on the clinical decision dependent on the patient's general condition. We hypothesize that clinical decision-based triage rather than the strict application of initial vital signs to the PedKTAS will exhibit a more accurate correlation with the disposition of the patient from the pediatric ED.

MATERIALS AND METHODS

Study setting and design

This was a retrospective cohort study of patients who visited the pediatric ED of a tertiary hospital with 315 beds. All patients under 15 years of age who were triaged using PedKTAS during the study period from January 1 to December 31, 2016, were included.

Upon arrival at the pediatric ED, patients' vital signs were measured (pulse rate was measured by pulse oximeter and respiratory rate was measured manually); and patients were triaged using PedKTAS by experienced triage providers. The triage team providers consisted of five nurses with at least two years of working experience in the pediatric ED. The triage was processed through a computer program that was networked with the hospital's medical record system. The patient's PedKTAS level, processing code, vital signs, gender, age, and disposition from the pediatric ED were transmitted to the National Emergency Department Information System. In this study, after the data were transmitted to the system, all information was collected and de-identified prior to analysis.

PedKTAS level simulation process

PedKTAS is a 5-level triage system (level 1, resuscitation; level 2, emergent; level 3, urgent; level 4, less urgent; and level 5, non-urgent) that classifies the patients into 17 categories based on their symptoms. Depending on the presence of modifiers (e.g., consciousness, vital signs, degree of respiratory difficulty, and bleeding disorders) that can be applied in the subcategories, the final PedKTAS level is determined (2). Therefore, patients within the same symptom category may be sorted into different PedKTAS levels, depending on the presence of modifiers, such as abnormal vital signs.

When using the PedKTAS, the patient's symptom categories and modifiers are recorded in the processing code. Even though the patient's vital signs measured at the pediatric ED (study site) were abnormal, if the patient's medical condition appeared to be mild and the measured abnormal vital signs were determined to have been measured in an upset child, the triage nurse down-triaged the patient based on previous studies suggesting evidence for a down-triage (5, 9). In these cases, we re-calculated the patient's PedKTAS levels by direct applying their abnormal vital signs to the classification criteria of PedKTAS for the study. The final PedKTAS levels of those patients whose initial abnormal vital signs were reconsidered by the triage nurse were defined as the ‘real practice (RP)-PedKTAS levels,’ and the calculated PedKTAS levels of these patients were defined as the ‘simulation (S)-PedKTAS levels.’

In the PedKTAS classification and simulation process, we used the respiratory distress physiologic acuity modifiers and definitions, hemodynamic stability physiologic acuity modifiers and definitions, respiratory distress, and heart rate distributions provided by the PedKTAS guideline (2, 5).

Primary and secondary outcomes

The primary outcome of this study was to observe whether the hospitalization rate according to the PedKTAS level was consistent with the hospitalization rate suggested by pediatric CTAS (9). Hospitalization included admission to the general ward, intensive care unit (ICU), operation room, and transfer to another hospital. The secondary outcomes were whether the PedKTAS level-specific hospitalization rate and ICU admission rate correlated with the previously results of CTAS multicenter study (10).

Statistical analysis

The Kolmogorov-Smirnov normality test was used to assess for normality. Data with a normal distribution were described using mean ± standard deviation, and non-parametric data were described using median (interquartile range). Pearson correlation analysis was used to compare results according to the level of PedKTAS and pediatric CTAS. P values < 0.05 were considered statistically significant. All statistics were analyzed using R version 3.3.3 (R Foundation for Statistical Computing, Vienna, Austria).

Ethics statement

The Institutional Review Board of Seoul National University reviewed and approved of the present study protocol (H-1702-106-833), and waived signed consent forms.

RESULTS

Study population and triaged levels

During the study period, a total 24,670 patients visited the pediatric ED. Of these, 22,841 patients under 15 years of age were triaged using PedKTAS (Fig. 1). The median age of the patients was 3.15 years, and 12,840 (56.2%) were male (Table 1).

Fig. 1
A flow chart of the entire patient and subject distribution based on PedKTAS classification methods.

PedKTAS = Pediatric Korean Triage and Acuity Scale, RP = real practice, S = simulation.

The triage results when using RP-PedKTAS showed that the KTAS level with the most patients was level 3 (11,789 [51.6%]), followed by level 4 (6,957 [30.5%]), level 5 (1,990 [8.7%]), level 2 (1,967 [8.6%]), and level 1 (138 [0.6%]). In contrast, the triage results when using S-PedKTAS showed that the highest number of patients was in level 2 (13,939 [61.0%]), followed by level 1 (4,532 [19.8%]), level 3 (2,510 [11.0%]), level 4 (1,333 [5.8%]), and level 5 (527 [2.3%]). Compared with triage using RP-PedKTAS, significantly more patients were triaged into levels 1 and 2 by S-PedKTAS, with a total of 18,229 cases, which was 79.8% of all patients observed during the study period (Table 2).

Table 2
Comparison of the hospitalization rates between RP-PedKTAS level and S-PedKTAS level

Primary outcome

The hospitalization rates according to the PedKTAS levels in this study were compared with the expected hospitalization rates proposed by pediatric CTAS (level 1, 70%–90%; level 2, 40%–70%; level 3, 20%–40%; level 4, 10%–20%; and level 5, 0%–10%) (9). For the RP-PedKTAS levels, the hospitalization rates according to the level showed a significant correlation with the proposed rates (r = 0.987, P = 0.002), and the hospitalization rates at 1, 2, and 5 were within the suggested range. However, in the case of S-PedKTAS levels, there was no significant correlation (r = 0.742, P = 0.151), and only the hospitalization rate of level 5 was within the proposed range (Fig. 2A).

Fig. 2
Hospitalization rates and ICU admission rates according to triage levels. (A) Comparison of hospitalization rates according to triage levels. Gray boxes indicate the range of PedCTAS level-specific expected hospitalization rates, and black rectangles represent the median for each level. (B) ICU admission rate according to triage levels.

ICU = intensive care unit, PedCTAS = Pediatric Canadian Triage and Acuity Scale, PedKTAS = Pediatric Korean Triage and Acuity Scale, RP = real practice, S = simulation.

*Data from Gravel et al. (10); Data from Gravel et al. (9).

Secondary outcomes

The PedKTAS level-specific hospitalization rate and ICU admission rate of this study were compared with the results of previous study using pediatric CTAS (10). The hospitalization rates and the ICU admission rates according to RP-PedKTAS levels were both highly associated with the results of the multicenter study using pediatric CTAS (r = 0.994, P = 0.001 and r = 0.999, P = 0.012; respectively). In contrary, the S-PedKTAS levels did not show a significant correlation with both the hospitalization rates and the ICU admission rates (r = 0.618, P = 0.267 and r = 0.957, P = 0.188; respectively) (Fig. 2B).

DISCUSSION

The higher predictability of a triage tool for determining a patient's status is essential for the efficient distribution of medical resources and quality improvement (6, 7, 11). This study is the first validation study on the predictability of the PedKTAS, and the results of this study can be helpful for revising the PedKTAS.

Compared with RP-PedKTAS, S-PedKTAS had an inferior predictability for ED outcomes, such as hospitalization rate and ICU admission rate. Therefore, for children visiting the ED, the strict application of their vital signs to the triage tool without any modifications would lead to an excessive utilization of resources and an inefficient distribution of medical resources. Moreover, when comparing the hospitalization rates with the expected hospitalization rates proposed by pediatric CTAS, RP-PedKTAS showed more compatible ranges with the proposed scheme than did S-PedKTAS.

Although the RP-PedKTAS level based on clinical decision better predicted the hospitalization rate, this practice should be considered a ‘bypass’ to improve the triage system rather than the ultimate solution. Because the excessive dependence on subjective decision may cause additional bias in triage, the CTAS system also recommends being careful when applying clinical judgment (5, 8). To complement this limitation, repeated education for triage nurses should be provided, and methods for setting objective criteria for down-triage should be developed (4). As an option for other solutions, an ED version of ‘reference’ vital signs range can be developed and utilized rather than vital signs standards from healthy populations (3, 12, 13).

The problem of the direct application of abnormal vital signs in children is not only a problem of KTAS but is also a common problem of CTAS-based triage systems. Therefore, several studies have been conducted to overcome this limitation, and these studies showed similar results as our study (4, 9). However, Gravel et al.'s study (9) was restricted to patients with fever (3–36 months), whereas the present study was not limited to fever and showed an analysis according to all ages using PedKTAS.

This study has some limitations. First, the data of this study are derived from a single center. Considering that patient severity and facility characteristics, including the numbers of the beds available for hospitalization varies between hospitals, applying the conclusions obtained from the results of this single center study to other hospital is not warranted. Nevertheless, this study brings awareness to the pitfalls of the PedKTAS and can serve as baseline data for further multicenter or even nationwide studies. Second, although the triage was done by multiple triage nurses, interpersonal reliability has not been verified. However, the fact that all triage nurses have more than 2 years of working experience at the pediatric ED and that the volume of patients was substantial (more than 22,000 patients during the study period) can reduce the bias in relation to triage nurses. Finally, this study did not perform an in-depth analysis of the patients' underlying disease and/or general medical condition. Rather than analyzing the underlying disease of the patients, this study focused primarily on the issue arising from directly applying abnormal vital signs without any modifications. Thus, further comprehensive studies are needed to investigate the characteristics of the study subjects.

In conclusion, even if the patient has abnormal vital signs measured in an upset state, if the patient's medical condition is mild instead of directly applying their abnormal vital signs to the PedKTAS, relying on the clinical decision of an experienced triage provider to determine the severity level has higher predictability for disposition from the pediatric ED. However, there are issues concerning the subjective clinical parameters that are used to modify an objective severity classification system. Therefore, to overcome these shortcomings, multicenter and national studies are needed to obtain objective and unbiased data.

Notes

DISCLOSURE:The authors have no potential conflicts of interest to disclose.

Author Contributions:

  • Conceptualization: Lee B, Kim DK, Kwak YH.

  • Formal analysis: Lee B.

  • Investigation: Lee B, Kim DK.

  • Writing - original draft: Lee B.

  • Writing - review & editing: Park JD, Kwak YH.

ACKNOWLEDGMENT

The authors thank Ms. Minjin Choi, Department of Emergency Medicine, Seoul National University Hospital, for her technical assistance in data acquisition for this study.

References

    1. Kim JH, Kim JW, Kim SY, Hong DY, Park SO, Baek KJ, Lee KR. Validation of the Korean Triage and Acuity Scale compare to triage by emergency severity index for emergency adult patient: preliminary study in a tertiary hospital emergency medical center. J Korean Soc Emerg Med 2016;27:436–441.
    1. Lim T, Park J, Je S. Pediatric Korean Triage and Acuity Scale. Pediatr Emerg Med J 2015;2:53–58.
    1. Fleming S, Thompson M, Stevens R, Heneghan C, Plüddemann A, Maconochie I, Tarassenko L, Mant D. Normal ranges of heart rate and respiratory rate in children from birth to 18 years of age: a systematic review of observational studies. Lancet 2011;377:1011–1018.
    1. Takahashi T, Inoue N, Shimizu N, Terakawa T, Goldman RD. ‘Down-triage’ for children with abnormal vital signs: evaluation of a new triage practice at a paediatric emergency department in Japan. Emerg Med J 2016;33:533–537.
    1. Warren DW, Jarvis A, LeBlanc L, Gravel J, CTAS National Working GroupCanadian Association of Emergency Physicians; National Emergency Nurses Affiliation; Association des Médecins d’Urgence du Québec; Canadian Paediatric Society; Society of Rural Physicians of Canada. Revisions to the Canadian Triage and Acuity Scale paediatric guidelines (PaedCTAS). CJEM 2008;10:224–243.
    1. Gouin S, Gravel J, Amre DK, Bergeron S. Evaluation of the Paediatric Canadian Triage and Acuity Scale in a pediatric ED. Am J Emerg Med 2005;23:243–247.
    1. Sprivulis PC, Da Silva JA, Jacobs IG, Frazer AR, Jelinek GA. The association between hospital overcrowding and mortality among patients admitted via Western Australian emergency departments. Med J Aust 2006;184:208–212.
    1. Bullard MJ, Chan T, Brayman C, Warren D, Musgrave E, Unger B, Members of the CTAS National Working GroupRevisions to the Canadian Emergency Department Triage and Acuity Scale (CTAS) guidelines. CJEM 2014;16:485–489.
    1. Gravel J, Manzano S, Arsenault M. Safety of a modification of the triage level for febrile children 6 to 36 months old using the Paediatric Canadian Triage and Acuity Scale. CJEM 2008;10:32–37.
    1. Gravel J, Fitzpatrick E, Gouin S, Millar K, Curtis S, Joubert G, Boutis K, Guimont C, Goldman RD, Dubrovsky AS, et al. Performance of the Canadian Triage and Acuity Scale for children: a multicenter database study. Ann Emerg Med 2013;61:27–32.e3.
    1. Mirhaghi A, Heydari A, Mazlom R, Ebrahimi M. The reliability of the Canadian Triage and Acuity Scale: meta-analysis. N Am J Med Sci 2015;7:299–305.
    1. Nijman RG, Thompson M, van Veen M, Perera R, Moll HA, Oostenbrink R. Derivation and validation of age and temperature specific reference values and centile charts to predict lower respiratory tract infection in children with fever: prospective observational study. BMJ 2012;345:e4224.
    1. O'Leary F, Hayen A, Lockie F, Peat J. Defining normal ranges and centiles for heart and respiratory rates in infants and children: a cross-sectional study of patients attending an Australian tertiary hospital paediatric emergency department. Arch Dis Child 2015;100:733–737.

Metrics
Share
Figures

1 / 2

Tables

1 / 2

PERMALINK