학술논문

Accuracy of working diagnosis by paramedics for patients presenting with dyspnoea.
Document Type
Article
Source
Emergency Medicine Australasia. Oct2016, Vol. 28 Issue 5, p525-530. 6p. 1 Diagram, 3 Charts.
Subject
*DIAGNOSIS of dyspnea
*CHI-squared test
*CLASSIFICATION
*CLINICAL competence
*COMPARATIVE studies
*CONFIDENCE intervals
*DYSPNEA
*EMERGENCY medical services
*EMERGENCY medical technicians
*EMERGENCY medicine
*HOSPITAL emergency services
*HOSPITAL medical staff
*MEDICAL needs assessment
*MEDICAL protocols
*MEDICAL practice
*PATIENTS
*PUBLIC hospitals
*STATISTICAL sampling
*STATISTICS
*PROFESSIONAL practice
*INTER-observer reliability
*RETROSPECTIVE studies
*DATA analysis software
*WORK experience (Employment)
*DESCRIPTIVE statistics
Language
ISSN
1742-6731
Abstract
Objective The present study aims to determine the agreement between paramedic and ED or hospital working diagnosis in dyspnoeic patients. Methods Non-consecutive written patient report forms were retrospectively audited for patients suffering from dyspnoea, who were transported to a tertiary hospital ED by ambulance paramedics. Accuracy of the paramedic working diagnosis was assessed by comparing agreement with either the primary or secondary ED diagnoses or hospital discharge diagnosis. Results The study cohort was 293 patients. Exact agreement between paramedic versus ED or hospital diagnosis was 64%, 95% CI 58-69, k = 0.58, 95% CI 0.52-0.64. Only 226 (77%) had a 'clearly documented' paramedic diagnosis. Among these, agreement with either ED or hospital diagnosis was 79%, and there was a trend towards more agreement as paramedic level of practice increased (74%, 78% and 87% for Basic, Intermediate and ALS paramedics, respectively, P = 0.07). Conversely, ALS paramedics were less likely to document a working diagnosis (30/98, 31%) compared with Intermediate (22/102, 23%) and BLS paramedics (15/93, 16%), P = 0.008. Diagnostic agreement varied according to medical condition, from anaphylaxis (100%) and asthma (86%) to acute pulmonary oedema (46%). Conclusions There was moderate agreement between paramedic and ED or hospital diagnosis. The number of cases with no clearly documented working diagnosis suggested that a singular working diagnosis may not always serve the complexity of presentation of some dyspnoea patients: more open descriptors such as 'mixed disease' or 'atypical features' should be encouraged. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]