Triage systems are used in emergency medical services to systematically prioritize prehospital resources according to individual patient conditions. Previous studies have shown cases of preventable deaths in emergency medical services even when triage systems are used, indicating a potential undertriage among some conditions. The aim of this study was to investigate the triage level among patients diagnosed with perforated peptic ulcer (PPU) or peptic ulcer bleeding (PUB).
Methods
In a three-year period in Central Denmark Region, all patients hospitalized within 24 h after a 1-1-2 emergency call and who subsequently received either a PPU or a PUB (hereinafter combined and referred to as PPU/PUB) or a First Hour Quintet (FHQ: respiratory failure, stroke, trauma, cardiac chest pain, and cardiac arrest) diagnosis were investigated. A modified Poisson regression was used to estimate the relative risk of receiving the highest and lowest prehospital response level. Also, a linear regression analysis was used to estimate the relative risk of 30-day mortality.
Results
Of 8658 evaluated patients, 263 were diagnosed with PPU/PUB. After adjusting for relevant confounding variables, patients diagnosed with PPU/PUB were less likely to receive ambulance transportation compared to patients diagnosed with stroke, RR = 1.41 (CI: 1.28–1.56); trauma, RR = 1.28 (CI: 1.15–1.42); cardiac chest pain, RR = 1.47 (CI: 1.33–1.62); and cardiac arrest, RR = 1.44 (CI: 1.31–1.42). Among patients diagnosed with PPU/PUB, 6.5% (CI: 3.3–9.7) did not receive ambulance transportation. The proportion of patients not receiving ambulance transportation was higher among patients diagnosed with PPU/PUB compared to patients diagnosed with an FHQ diagnosis. The 30-day mortality rate among patients diagnosed with PPU/PUB was 7.8% (CI: 4.2–11.1). This was lower than the 30-day mortality rate among patients diagnosed with respiratory failure (P = 0.010), stroke (P = 0.001), and cardiac arrest (P < 0.001), but comparable to the 30-day mortality among patients diagnosed with cardiac chest pain (P = 0.080) and trauma (P = 0.281).
Conclusion
Among patients calling 1-1-2, fewer patients diagnosed with PPU/PUB received ambulance transportation than patients diagnosed with FHQ diagnoses, despite a high mortality among patients diagnosed with PPU/PUB.
Abkürzungen
CCI
Charlson Comorbidity Index
CI
Confidence Interval
CPR
Civil Personal Register
EMCC
Emergency Medical Communication Center
EMS
Emergency Medical Services
FHQ
First Hour Quintet
ICD-10
International Classification of Disease
IQR
Interquartile Ranges
N
Number
OR
Odds Ratio
PPU
Perforated Peptic Ulcer
PUB
Peptic Ulcer Bleeding
Ref.
Reference
RR
Relative Risk
Background
Triage systems are used in emergency medical services (EMS) for systematic prioritization of prehospital resources according to the presumed severity and urgency of the individual patient’s condition. Rapid diagnostics and treatment play a key role in severe time-critical conditions. Thus, avoiding undertriage is important. The criteria-based Danish Index for emergency care is used after all emergency calls (1-1-2) to an emergency medical communication center (EMCC) in Denmark. The Danish Index generally triages patients with the highest hospital admission risks and case fatality rates to the highest level of emergency [1]. A previous Danish study suggested cases of preventable deaths in EMS despite applying the Danish Index, thus indicating a potential undertriage among some conditions [2]. This has also been demonstrated in a Finnish EMS system [3]. The First Hour Quintet (FHQ) diagnoses (respiratory failure, stroke, trauma, cardiac chest pain, and cardiac arrest), are highly targeted in prehospital triage systems [4]. However, identifying other high-risk diseases may discover conditions susceptible for undertriage.
Diseases of the digestive system account for about 3% of diagnoses among patients hospitalized after a 1-1-2 call. However, they rarely receive the highest-level response (i.e. ambulance with lights and sirens) [1, 5]. Patients with the severe condition perforated peptic ulcer (PPU) have a 30-day mortality rate of more than 20%, and for patients with peptic ulcer bleeding (PUB) the rate is nearly 10% [6, 7]. To reduce mortality, national inhospital guidelines implemented nationwide recommend reduced time from hospital admission to diagnosis and treatment for these patients [8, 9]. However, versatile symptomatology (e.g. referred abdominal pain, anemia-caused tiredness, etc.) might lead to inadequate symptom description [10], making it difficult to raise a correct suspicion of PPU and PUB (hereinafter combined and referred to as PPU/PUB) after the medical emergency call. A combination of high short-term mortality and low prehospital triage level of patients with PPU/PUB may suggest a need for improvements in emergency care for these patients.
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Therefore, the aim of this study was to examine prehospital triage among patients diagnosed inhospitally with PPU/PUB and compare these findings with the triage among other severe time-critical conditions. We hypothesize that patients diagnosed with PPU/PUB are less likely to receive the most acute level of triage despite mortality rates comparable to FHQ patients.
Methods
Study population and setting
This was a population-based observational study performed in the Central Denmark Region in a three-year period from December 1, 2011 to November 30, 2014. The Central Denmark Region covers an area of 13,007 km2 urban, suburban, and rural land with 1.3 million inhabitants corresponding to 23% of the Danish population [11].
We included all first time 1-1-2 calls within the study period. Exclusion criteria included: invalid civil personal register (CPR) number, if patients called more than one time in the study period, and non-existing symptom categories within the dispatch protocol. The cohort was identified via technical dispatch software in the EMCC, containing data on 1-1-2 calls, triage level, and prehospital time stamps. Vital status, gender, and age were retrieved from the Danish Civil Registration System [12], and data on previous diseases and present diagnoses, according to the 10th version of the International Classification of Disease (ICD-10), were retrieved from the National Patient Register [13]. Each Danish citizen has a unique CPR number that makes it possible to link Danish registers on an individual level. Patients were followed from hospital admission date to either death, emigration, or November 30, 2014 – whichever came first. The study was approved by the Danish Data Protection Agency (record number 1–16–02-207-15). Approval by the local ethics committee and collection of informed consent are not required for observational studies.
Triage
The Danish health care system provides free and unconstrained access for all citizens to general practitioners, prehospital emergency medical services, and hospitals [14]. Thus, patients diagnosed with PPU/PUB or a FHQ diagnosis can gain access to acute medical help either via general practitioners, through the Danish national emergency number 1-1-2, or by appearance at a hospital (which is rare). When people dial 1-1-2, they are connected to a healthcare professional in the EMCC. In the Central Denmark Region, the EMCC is staffed by registered nurses and paramedics with six weeks’ additional training in communication and use of the dispatch protocol Danish Index [15]. This tool is designed to evaluate the severity and urgency of the patients’ conditions. It is divided into 37 symptom chapters (e.g. non-traumatic bleeding, stomach or back pain, traffic accident, etc.), each one subdivided into 5 levels of decreasing emergency (A-E).
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PPU/PUB was defined according to specific ICD-10 diagnosis-codes listed by the Danish Clinical Register of Emergency Surgery [16]. Respiratory failure, stroke, cardiac chest pain, and cardiac arrest were defined according to specific ICD-10 diagnosis-codes listed by the European Emergency Data Project [17]. Trauma was defined as ICD-10 trauma diagnoses with an inhospital survival probability ≤0.941 based on pooled data from nearly 4 million injuries in seven industrialized countries, including Denmark, with similar emergency care setups [18, 19]. No validation of the trauma diagnoses has been conducted whereas all other diagnoses have been validated previously [20, 21]. The exact definition of each group is listed in the Appendix 3 (Table 5).
Statistical analyses
All statistical analyses were conducted in STATA version 14.1 (StataCorp, TX, USA). Categorical data were presented as number and percentage (%) with a 95% confidence interval (CI). Comparisons of categorical data were made by a chi-squared test. Continuous data were presented as means with a 95% CI for normally distributed data and as medians with interquartile ranges (IQR) for skewed data. Comparisons of continuous data were made using a student’s t test or a Mann-Whitney U test when appropriate.
A modified Poisson regression with a robust error-variance approach was used to estimate the relative risks (RR) of level A triage and level E triage [22]. PPU/PUB was used as a reference point and the following covariates were included in the adjusted analyses: age, sex, Charlson Comorbidity Index (CCI) score, and time of 1-1-2 call.
30-day mortality was used as proxy of disease severity. The initially intended use of a Cox proportional regression analysis was abandoned, as the data did not fulfill the proportional hazards assumption. Instead, a generalized linear regression of pseudo-observations was conducted to achieve relative risk estimates of mortality at specific time points. This kind of statistics does not require the fulfillment of the proportional hazards assumption and was therefore applicable [23]; the primary analysis was conducted on complete cases. In a sensitivity analysis, we repeated the regression analysis on triage level after imputing missing data by following two models: a multiple imputation model using chained equations and a bootstrapping model [24, 25].
Results
In the three-year study period, 136,891 1-1-2 emergency calls were received by the EMCC in the Central Denmark Region. Figure 1 displays a flowchart of the patient inclusion. Of the 94,881 patients who fulfilled the inclusion criteria, 8658 (6.32%) were diagnosed with PPU/PUB or a FHQ diagnosis. Patients diagnosed with PPU/PUB were older and had more comorbidities than the average FHQ patient. The variation of potential confounding variables between PPU/PUB and FHQ diagnoses is displayed in Table 1. Among the 8658 patients investigated, 263 were diagnosed with PPU/PUB. Of these, 63.4% (CI: 57.1–69.6) received a level A response. After adjusting for age, sex, CCI score, and time of 1-1-2 call, the study showed that patients diagnosed with PPU/PUB were less likely to receive a level A triage compared to patients diagnosed with stroke, RR = 1.41 (CI: 1.28–1.56); trauma, RR = 1.28 (CI: 1.15–1.42); cardiac chest pain, RR = 1.47 (CI: 1.33–1.62); and cardiac arrest, RR = 1.44 (CI: 1.31–1.42). On the contrary, the risk of level E triage was higher among patients diagnosed with PPU/PUB compared to patients diagnosed with a FHQ diagnosis except for patients diagnosed with respiratory failure, (RR = 0.60 (CI: 0.35–1.05), Table 2). The association between diagnosis-groups and triage was not noticeably modified by age, sex, and CCI score (Table 3 in Appendix 1). After imputing missing data on triage level, patients diagnosed with PPU/PUB had a lower risk of receiving a level A triage compared to all FHQ diagnoses including respiratory failure. After imputation the results regarding level E triage remained robust, except in the bootstrapping model, where patients diagnosed with stroke had a comparable possibility of receiving a level E triage (see Table 4 in the Appendix 2).
Table 1
Baseline characteristics
Variable
PPU/PUB
(n = 263)
Respiratory Failure
(n = 2589)
Stroke
(n = 1688)
Trauma
(n = 1219)
Cardiac Chest Pain
(n = 1804)
Cardiac Arrest
(n = 1095)
Total
(n = 8658)
Age, years (95% CI)
69.4 (67.6;71.2)
63.2 (62.3;64.1)
70.1 (69.4;70.8)
39.9 (38.7;41.1)
69.2 (68.5;69.8)
68.9 (68.0;69.0)
63.4 (63.0;63.9)
Sex, % (95% CI)
Male
58.9 (53.0;64.9)
55.2 (53.4;57.2)
55.6 (53.3;58.0)
61.6 (58.8;64.3)
66.6 (64.4;68.8)
65.6 (62.8;68.4)
60.0 (59.0;61.0)
Emergency callsa, % (95% CI)
1
95.1 (92.4;97.7)
89.5 (88.3;90.6)
95.6 (94.6;96.6)
98.5 (97.8;99.2)
89.9 (88.5;91.3)
98.1 (97.3;98.9)
93.3 (92.8;93.8)
2
4.9 (2.3;7.6)
7.4 (6.4;8.4)
4.0 (3.1;5.0)
1.3 (0.7;2.0)
8.3 (7.0;9.5)
1.7 (1.0;2.5)
5.3 (4.8;5.7)
3
–
1.7 (1.2;2.2)
0.3 (0.0;0.6)
0.1 (0.0;0.2)
1.2 (0.7;1.7)
0.2 (0.0;0.4)
0.8 (0.6;1.0)
4+
–
1.5 (1.0;1.9)
0.1 (0.0;0.2)
0.1 (0.0;0.2)
0.7 (0.3;1.1)
–
0.6 (0.4;0.8)
CCI score, % (95% CI)
0
0.8 (0.0;1.8)
15.7 (14.3;17.1)
–
77.1 (74.8;79.5)
9.2 (7.9;10.5)
31.5 (28.8;34.3)
21.5 (20.6;22.3)
1
41.1 (35.1;47.0)
25.7 (24.0;27.4)
51.1 (48.8;53.5)
10.3 (8.5;12.0)
29.4 (27.3;31.5)
20.9 (18.5;23.3)
29.1 (28.2;30.1)
2
16.7 (11.2;21.3)
15.2 (13.8;16.6)
14.6 (12.9;16.3)
5.2 (3.9;6.4)
18.5 (16.7;20.3)
15.4 (13.3;17.6)
14.4 (13.7;15.2)
3+
41.4 (35.5;47.4)
43.4 (41.5;45.3)
34.2 (32.0;36.5)
7.4 (5.9;8.9)
43.0 (40.7;45.2)
32.1 (29.4;34.9)
35.0 (34.0;36.0)
Time of 1–1-2 call, % (95% CI)
00:00–05:59
18.3 (13.6;22.9)
21.7 (20.1;23.3)
6.9 (5.7;8.1)
9.7 (8.0;11.3)
18.0 (16.2;19.7)
12.3 (10.4;14.3)
15.0 (14.3;15.8)
06:00–11:59
30.4 (24.8;36.0)
32.1 (30.3;33.9)
36.0 (33.7;38.3)
27.2 (24.7;29.7)
29.8 (27.7;31.9)
37.5 (34.7;40.4)
32.3 (31.4;33.3)
12:00–17.59
31.9 (26.3;37.6)
22.2 (20.6;23.8)
35.2 (32.9;37.5)
40.0 (37.3;42.8)
28.3 (26.2;30.4)
28.8 (26.1;31.5)
29.6 (28.7;30.6)
18:00–23:59
19.4 (14.6;24.2)
24.0 (22.4;25.7)
21.9 (19.9;23.9)
23.0 (20.6;25.3)
24.0 (22.0;26.0)
21.4 (18.9;23.8)
23.0 (22.1;23.9)
Abbreviations: PPU perforated peptic ulcer, PUB peptic ulcer bleeding, n number of patients, CI confidence interval, CCI Charlson Comorbidity Index
aNumber of emergency calls per patient
Table 2
Triage and mortality
Group
Frequency, % (95% CI)
Unadjusted, RR (95% CI)
Adjusteda,b, RR (95% CI)
p-value
A-triage (n = 7538)
PPU/PUB
63.26 (57.12–69.61)
1 (ref.)
1 (ref.)
–
Respiratory Failure
69.73 (67.85–71.62)
1.10 (0.99–1.22)
1.09 (0.98–1.20)
0.105
Stroke
89.22 (87.67–90.78)
1.41 (1.27–1.56)
1.41 (1.28–1.56)
< 0.001
Trauma
83.81 (81.46–86.16)
1.32 (1.19–1.46)
1.28 (1.15–1.42)
< 0.001
Cardiac Chest Pain
93.22 (91.99–94.45)
1.47 (1.33–1.62)
1.46 (1.33–1.62)
< 0.001
Cardiac Arrest
92.23 (90.52–93.95)
1.46 (1.32–1.61)
1.44 (1.30–1.59)
< 0.001
E-triage (n = 7538)
PPU/PUB
6.47 (3.28–9.65)
1 (ref.)
1 (ref.)
–
Respiratory Failure
3.79 (3.01–4.58)
0.59 (0.35–1.00)
0.60 (0.35–1.05)
0.073
Stroke
2.56 (1.77–3.36)
0.40 (0.22–0.71)
0.41 (0.23–0.73)
0.002
Trauma
0.74 (0.19–1.29)
0.11 (0.05–0.28)
0.13 (0.05–0.36)
< 0.001
Cardiac Chest pain
1.62 (1.00–2.24)
0.25 (0.13–0.47)
0.25 (0.13–0.47)
< 0.001
Cardiac Arrest
1.17 (0.50–1.86)
0.18 (0.08–0.39)
0.18 (0.08–0.40)
< 0.001
30-day mortality (n = 7538)
PPU/PUB
7.83 (4.52–11.13)
1 (ref.)
1 (ref.)
–
Respiratory Failure
12.16 (10.87–13.44)
1.55 (1.01–2.39)
1.67 (1.06–2.64)
0.028
Stroke
16.83 (15.01–18.66)
2.15 (1.39–3.32)
2.03 (1.27–3.24)
0.003
Trauma
3.16 (2.16–4.17)
0.40 (0.24–0.68)
1.33 (0.72–2.44)
0.364
Cardiac Chest Pain
4.45 (3.49–5.42)
0.57 (0.35–0.91)
0.64(0.38–1.06)
0.080
Cardiac Arrest
47.34 (40.67–54.00)
6.05 (3.89–9.41)
6.72 (4.21–10.73)
< 0.001
Abbreviations: PPU perforated peptic ulcer, PUB peptic ulcer bleeding, CI confidence interval, RR relative risk, n number, ref. reference, CCI Charlson Comorbidity Index
aTriage adjusted for age, sex, CCI score, and time of 1–1-2 call
b30-day mortality adjusted for age, sex, CCI score, and time of 1–1-2 call – an interaction term between exposure and sex was included
×
The 30-day mortality rate among patients diagnosed with PPU/PUB was 7.8% (CI: 4.2–11.1). In the adjusted analysis, 30-day mortality was similar for patients with cardiac chest pain, RR = 0.64 (CI: 0.38–1.06) and patients diagnosed with trauma, RR = 1.33 (CI: 0.72–2.44), but higher for respiratory failure, RR = 1.67 (CI: 1.06–2.64); stroke, RR = 2.03 (CI: 1.27–3.24), and cardiac arrest, RR = 6.72 (CI: 4.21–10.73).
Discussion
In this large observational study, including 8658 patients hospitalized within 24 h from a 1-1-2 call and diagnosed with PPU/PUB or a FHQ diagnosis, we found that the 30-day mortality rate among PPU/PUB patients was comparable to two of the five FHQ groups but fewer patients with PPU/PUB received level A triage compared to the FHQ patients.
The main objective of the EMCC is to dispatch the correct level of triage to keep the degree of undertriage to a minimum, as undertriage is associated with increased mortality. Andersen et al. discovered 18 potentially preventable deaths same day as the 1-1-2 call in an 18-month period [2]. Kuisma et al. also discovered 29 potentially avoidable deaths and one definitely avoidable death in patients receiving the lower urgency triage categories in a three-year period [3] and other studies have shown similar results [26‐29]. The possibility of reducing the number of potential cases of undertriage seems present according to previous studies. A Belgium study has shown that two training sessions can increase the sensitivity of sending a mobile critical care unit along with a basic life support ambulance from 36% to 60% without any change in specificity [30]. Another Belgium study suggested trends towards an increased ability to obtain information from emergency callers among the telephone responders after a training session [31]. An American study showed that appropriate performance feedback could increase dispatch protocol compliance from 76% to 95% [32].
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Today, the telephone responders in the EMCC are offered continuous education on a regular basis. However, a more systematic approach might be beneficial. The high amount of level A triage among patients diagnosed with cardiac chest pain (primarily acute myocardial infarction and angina pectoris) seen in our study might be an effect of previous research regarding patients diagnosed with ST-elevation myocardial infarction, causing a change in procedure for these patients. Today, ST-elevation myocardial infarction is diagnosed prehospitally and the patients are field-triaged directly to an invasive center. This has resulted in reduced time consumption of reperfusion, a decrease in mortality, and a lower risk of congestive heart failure [33‐36]. On the contrary, increased attention to patients presenting themselves with chest pain may potentially result in overtriage [37, 38].
The main strength of this study is its large-sized population-based cohort, which improves precision and external validity. The unique CPR numbers provide the possibility of record linkage of validated registers on an individual level [12, 39]. Another strength is the free access to health care for all patients mitigating the risk of selection bias. Other studies might have an underrepresentation of less critical illnesses due to treatment expenses. Furthermore, diagnoses are validated for most ICD-10 diagnoses and this ensures correct classification. The nearly complete data set of the included covariates is also a strength. On the other hand, the weaknesses of this study relate to its register-based observational design. First of all, the proportion of patients with invalid CPR contributes to potential selection bias. However, missing data on emergency patients making a 1-1-2 call is difficult to avoid, as seen in other similar observational prehospital studies [1, 4, 40‐42]. Compared to the final cohort, patients with invalid CPR had a higher proportion of level E triage and tended to call more frequently in the evening and at night. Further information on these patients was unobtainable, thus it remains unanswered whether these patients differed from the final cohort in other ways. Second, missing outcome data on triage level, especially among patients diagnosed with trauma, may eventually lead to bias. In order to address this issue, a sensitivity analysis with imputed triage level was conducted using two different imputation models, and no major estimate changes were observed. Last, although adjusted for several potential confounders, unobserved confounding would still be able to affect our estimates, and residual confounding cannot be ruled out.
Based on the current study, undertriage seems present among PPU/PUB patients, possibly caused by the versatile symptomatology, the caller’s description of the symptomatology, the telephone responders’ perception of the symptomatology, and the structure of the Danish Index. No prehospital guidelines exist explaining how to handle these patients. In the hospital setting, however, early endoscopic therapy has been shown to reduce mortality and several time-dependent inhospital endoscopic national guidelines exist [8, 43]. The initial assessment by the telephone responder is of great importance in securing efficient prehospital triage, as correct triage will reduce the time from onset of symptoms to initial on scene evaluation by health care professionals. At this point, rapid initial prehospital evaluation of the patient with objective measures of severity will further help clinical decision making and, if necessary, modulate the triage of the patient. Factors that can improve the prehospital care of patients with PPU/PUB include: improvements of the Danish Index, a structured training program for telephone responders in the EMCC, and the development of a fast track handling from the prehospital phase to the inhospital phase in order to improve this transition. Future studies should address these challenges.
Conclusion
Among patients calling 1-1-2, patients diagnosed with PPU/PUB had a lower proportion of highest level of triage and a higher proportion of lowest level of triage than FHQ patients. The 30-day mortality among patients diagnosed with PPU/PUB was comparable to the 30-day mortality among patients diagnosed with cardiac chest pain and trauma. This study suggests that undertriage is present among patients diagnosed with PPU/PUB.
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Acknowledgements
I would like to acknowledge Ingunn S. Riddervold for the collection of the approval from the Danish Data Protection Agency, Vicki E. Vallund for her contribution regarding proofreading of the article, and the Biostatistical Advisory Service at Aarhus University for their contribution regarding imputation of missing data.
Funding
The research was funded by the Prehospital Emergency Medical Services, Central Denmark Region, Denmark.
Availability of data and materials
The date sets used and analyzed during the current study are available from the corresponding author upon reasonable request.
Ethics approval and consent to participate
The study was approved by the Danish Data Protection Agency (record number 1–16–02-207-15). See attached file “Ethics Approval”.
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Consent for publication
Approval by the local ethics committee and collection of informed consent are not required for observational studies.
Competing interests
The authors declare that they have no competing interests.
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