Clinical Trials Logo

Clinical Trial Summary

This study evaluates the efficacy of advanced triage in improving the quality of care outcomes of patients attending the Emergency Department (ED) united care of high complexity hospital. There are four steps; Step 1 will consist of a concept analysis. Step 2 will include a mapping of advanced practice protocol terminologies. Step 3 will analyse the opinion of health professionals on advanced triage. In step 4: in retrospective phase, sociodemographic and clinical variables and quality indicators such as waiting time will be analysed. After that, in the prospective phase, advanced triage will be implemented and the two cohorts will be compared.


Clinical Trial Description

STEP 1: Study design: a concept analysis will be carried out based on a systematic analysis method by which it details and specifies the element to be studied, in this case, the Advanced Triage (AT). This study is based on the method that was outlined by Wilson (Wilson, 1969) and later evolved by Avant (Walker & Avant, 1989). This technique consists of eleven stages: 1) isolating questions concerning the concept; 2) finding suitable answers; 3-7) developing real or invented cases; 8) determining the social context; 9) identifying the underlying emotions; 10) establishing the practical results; 11) defining the results in language that facilitates the clarification of the controversial concept. The use of this methodology provides the construction of different definitions that reach all variants of the AT concept. STEP 2: Study design: Observational, descriptive, cross-sectional, retrospective, retrospective, observational study of interobserver concordance of bidirectional cross-mapping between Architecture Terminology Interface Knowledge (ATIC), Nursing Diagnoses: Definitions & Classification (NANDA), Nursing Interventions Classification (NIC) and the International Classification of Diseases and Related Health Problems (ICD-10). Based on the protocols of the Nurse Demand Management (NDM) for primary health care (PHC) of the Catalan Institute of Health. Data collection: The data collector will proceed to design a form that allows the collection and connection of the three terminologies in each concept (assessment, diagnosis and intervention). The identification of these equivalences will be carried out by the participation of three nurses independently of each of the researchers. Several interobserver consensus sessions will be held according to the results of the concordance. Discrepancies will be resolved, if appropriate, through the agreement processes. To make the equivalences of the concepts included in the NDM protocols with the different languages (ATIC, NANDA, NIC and ICD-10), with trichotomous variables: Yes /No/ Partially; and nominal quantitative variables, to facilitate the understanding of the mapping, the codes representing the type of equivalence are included. Data analysis: The collected data will be processed and checked for processing errors and analysed with EXCEL. Interobserver reliability will be calculated by considering the ratio according to the results of the three investigators and using the kappa(K) index calculation, in which the agreement is considered to be: (1) low, if (k) ≤0.20; (2) moderate, if (k) 0.21-0.40; (3) acceptable, if (K) 0.61-0.80 and (5) excellent, if (k) ≤0.81. STEP 3 Study design: observational, descriptive, cross-sectional and prospective study of the different protocols already existing in the PHC of the Catalan Institute of Health and assess whether they are suitable for the hospital setting Study setting: The study will be carried out in the ED of a high complexity public hospital in the southern metropolitan area of Barcelona (Spain). This stage will consist of two phases: Phase 1 (P1): a committee of experts will be formed, which will evaluate the existing protocols. Phase 2 (P2): surveys will be passed to several health professionals working in the ED of a high complexity hospital, in order to know their opinion about the AT. Participants: In Phase 1, it will consist of 12 healthcare professionals (8 nurses and 4 doctors) who will work in the ED of a high complexity hospital. In Phase 2, the study population will be all healthcare professionals who work in the ED in an assisting or management capacity in a high complexity hospital. Selection criteria: Inclusion criteria: nurses and physicians, assistants and managers of the emergency departments of public hospitals in Catalonia. Exclusion criteria: Auxiliary nursing care technicians, orderlies, nurses and administrative staff. Sample size (phase 2):Starting from a maximum indeterminacy with an expected proportion (p)= 0.05, a 95% confidence interval (α=0.05) and a precision (y)=0.05. The number of professionals to be included will be 385. Assuming 15% of possible losses, the corrected sample formula will be applied, which gives a total sample of 490 individuals. The sampling technique in this phase will be non-probabilistic consecutive sampling. Data collection: the variables for phase 1 and phase 2 of stpe 3 will be the usefulness and applicability of the NDM, protocols by the hospital AT and two lines will be considered: the first, the evaluation of the perception of usefulness and the second, of applicability by the healthcare professionals, from the two phases. Perception of usefulness: (phases 1 and phases 2) professionals' impression and assessment of the correctness and advantages of each of the 33 protocols of the NDM by the AT. This variable is measured on a qualitative ordinal scale: 0 to 10, where 0 feels totally disagree and 10 feels totally agree. Perception of applicability: (phases 1 and phases 2) practitioners' impression and assessment of the adaptability and feasibility of each of the 33 NDM protocols by AT. This variable is measured with an ordinal qualitative scale: 0 to 10, feeling 0 strongly disagree and 10 strongly agree. Secondary variables: (phases 2) years of experience, professional groups, beliefs about nursing professional domains, knowledge about AT and opinion about AT. The data collection in phase 1 will be carried out on the basis of grids, where the 33 protocols of the NDM will be analysed. In each protocol, 12 questions will have to be analysed. In phase 2, a questionnaire consisting of four blocks will be administered: (1) socio-demographic data will be asked; (2) knowledge of the AT will be asked; (3) the opinion held by the different health professionals will be asked; (4) nursing competences will be asked. Data analysis: qualitative variables will be described by proportions, calculating 95% confidence intervals. Quantitative variables will be described with mean and median as measures of centrality, and standard deviation and interquartile range as measures of dispersion.The normality of the distribution of the quantitative variables will be checked with the Kolmogorov-Smirnov test pot, and the parametric and non-parametric pots indicated in each case in the bivariate analysis will be applied; normally, the most commonly used pots will be the Chi-square, the Mann-Whitney U, the Student's t and Pearson's correlation-regression pots. Finally, multivariate analysis will include logistic regression techniques. P-values of less than 0.05 will be considered statistically significant. STEP 4: Study design: quasi-experimental study consisting of 2 phases: phase 1 (retrospective control) and phase 2 (prospective intervention), where the AT will be implemented based on the advanced nurse practitioner's. Study setting: the scope of the study will be the ED of a highly complex hospital in a centre in Catalonia (northeastern Spain), which serves as a community reference for 201,192 inhabitants of Hospitalet and Prat de Llobregat and is a reference centre for processes requiring high technology for more than 2 million inhabitants of the South Metropolitan area, Camp de Tarragona and Terres de l'Ebre. Outpatient ED of a tertiary-care centre in Catalonia (Northeast Spain), which serves as a referral centre for community reference of 201,192 people in the Southern Metropolitan Area of Barcelona. In both phases, all adult patients (>18 years) who will visit the hospital ED and who will be classified with priority levels III, IV or V on the Emergency Severity Index (ESI) scale will be eligible to participate in the study. Procedure and interventions: Control group will apply the usual care of the service and will be analysed: (a) quality indicators specific to triage; (b) cluster; (c) satisfaction; (c) pain; (d) waiting time. This part of the study will allow us to gain a better understanding of the reality of ED care. In relation to the level of urgency and its complexity, allowing us to establish the digital footprint. In order to be able to compare them with each other. Data analysis: qualitative variables will be described by proportions, calculating 95% confidence intervals. Quantitative variables will be described with mean and median as measures of centrality, and standard deviation and interquartile range as measures of dispersion. The normality of the distribution of quantitative variables will be checked with the Kolmogorov-Smirnov test, and the parametric and non-parametric pots indicated in each case in the bivariate analysis will be applied; normally, the most commonly used pots will be the Chi-square, the Mann-Whitney U, the Student's t and Pearson's correlation-regression pots. Finally, multivariate analysis will include logistic regression techniques. P-values of less than 0.05 will be considered statistically significant. All data will be analysed using Statistical Package for the Social Sciences (SPSS) v26.0 software. The final results will be used to design the hospital ED TA implementation programme. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT05230108
Study type Interventional
Source Hospital Universitari de Bellvitge
Contact Cristina Font Cabrera, Nurse
Phone +34 687 235 773
Email cristinafont@ub.edu
Status Not yet recruiting
Phase N/A
Start date September 1, 2022
Completion date December 31, 2025

See also
  Status Clinical Trial Phase
Completed NCT04244565 - Self-Directed Versus Traditional Clinical Learning Model on Nurses' Airway Management Competencies