TY - JOUR
T1 - Self-rated worry in acute care telephone triage
T2 - a mixed-methods study
AU - Gamst-Jensen, Hejdi
AU - Huibers, Linda
AU - Pedersen, Kristoffer
AU - Christensen, Erika F
AU - Ersbøll, Annette K
AU - Lippert, Freddy K
AU - Egerod, Ingrid
N1 - © British Journal of General Practice 2018.
PY - 2018/3
Y1 - 2018/3
N2 - Background Telephone triage is used to assess acute illness or injury. Clinical decision making is often assisted by triage tools that lack callers' perspectives. This study analysed callers' perception of urgency, defined as degree of worry in acute care telephone calls. Aim To explore the caller's ability to quantify their degree of worry, the association between degree of worry and variables related to the caller, the effect of degree of worry on triage outcome, and the thematic content of the caller's worry. Design and setting A mixed-methods study with simultaneous convergent design combining descriptive statistics and thematic analysis of 180 calls to a Danish out-of-hours service. Method The following quantitative data were measured: age of caller, sex, reason for encounter, symptom duration, triage outcome, and degree of worry (rated from 1 = minimally worried to 5 = extremely worried). Qualitative data consisted of audio-recorded telephone calls. Results Most callers (170 out of 180) were able to scale their worry when contacting the outof-hours service (median = 3, interquartile range = 2-4, mean = 2.76). Degree of worry was associated with female sex (odds ratio [OR] 1.98, 95% CI = 1.13 to 3.45) and symptom duration (>24 hours: OR 2.01, 95% CI = 1.13 to 3.45) (reference <5 hours), but not with age or reason for encounter. A high degree of worry significantly increased the chance of being triaged to a face-to-face consultation. The thematic content of worry varied from emotions of feeling bothered to feeling distressed. Callers provided more contextual information when asked about their degree of worry. Conclusion Callers were able to rate their degree of worry. The degree of worry scale is feasible for largerscale studies if incorporating a patient-centred approach in out-of-hours telephone triage.
AB - Background Telephone triage is used to assess acute illness or injury. Clinical decision making is often assisted by triage tools that lack callers' perspectives. This study analysed callers' perception of urgency, defined as degree of worry in acute care telephone calls. Aim To explore the caller's ability to quantify their degree of worry, the association between degree of worry and variables related to the caller, the effect of degree of worry on triage outcome, and the thematic content of the caller's worry. Design and setting A mixed-methods study with simultaneous convergent design combining descriptive statistics and thematic analysis of 180 calls to a Danish out-of-hours service. Method The following quantitative data were measured: age of caller, sex, reason for encounter, symptom duration, triage outcome, and degree of worry (rated from 1 = minimally worried to 5 = extremely worried). Qualitative data consisted of audio-recorded telephone calls. Results Most callers (170 out of 180) were able to scale their worry when contacting the outof-hours service (median = 3, interquartile range = 2-4, mean = 2.76). Degree of worry was associated with female sex (odds ratio [OR] 1.98, 95% CI = 1.13 to 3.45) and symptom duration (>24 hours: OR 2.01, 95% CI = 1.13 to 3.45) (reference <5 hours), but not with age or reason for encounter. A high degree of worry significantly increased the chance of being triaged to a face-to-face consultation. The thematic content of worry varied from emotions of feeling bothered to feeling distressed. Callers provided more contextual information when asked about their degree of worry. Conclusion Callers were able to rate their degree of worry. The degree of worry scale is feasible for largerscale studies if incorporating a patient-centred approach in out-of-hours telephone triage.
U2 - 10.3399/bjgp18X695021
DO - 10.3399/bjgp18X695021
M3 - Journal article
C2 - 29440015
SN - 0960-1643
VL - 68
SP - e197-e203
JO - British Journal of General Practice
JF - British Journal of General Practice
IS - 668
ER -