Triage tool inter-rater reliability: a comparison of live versus paper case scenarios

J Emerg Nurs. 2007 Aug;33(4):319-23. doi: 10.1016/j.jen.2006.12.016. Epub 2007 Jun 21.

Abstract

Background: Published studies of triage scale inter-rater reliability assessment have been conducted mostly using paper case scenarios.

Objective: To determine if this method of inter-rater reliability assessment generated significantly different measures from those generated from live triage cases.

Methods: This was a multicenter, prospective, observational cohort study of a population-based random sample of patients triaged at 2 emergency departments during a period of 4 months. All patients presenting to the emergency department within the study periods were simultaneously and independently triaged using a 5-level triage acuity scale by 2 to 3 research triage nurses blinded to each other's assessment and to the study objective. After 6 months, the same nurses were asked to assign triage scores to paper case scenarios of the same patients that they had each previously triaged.

Results: Each of the 9 research nurses triaged approximately 90 cases. The inter-rater reliabilities as measured by an intraclass correlation coefficient were 0.9 (95% CI = 0.87 to 93) for the live triage assessments and 0.76 (95% CI = 0.73 to 0.79) for the paper case scenarios. The mean triage score assigned to the live cases was significantly less than that assigned to the paper-based cases (3.17; 95% CI = 3.08 to 3.26) (p < 0.001).

Conclusions: There is moderate to high agreement between live cases and paper case scenarios, and the inter-rater reliabilities, although significantly different, are acceptable in both cases. It is impossible to determine which triage setting provides a more accurate triage score but paper case scenarios generally receive lower triage scores than live cases.

Publication types

  • Comparative Study
  • Evaluation Study
  • Multicenter Study
  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Emergency Service, Hospital*
  • Humans
  • Nursing Evaluation Research / methods*
  • Observer Variation
  • Ontario
  • Prospective Studies
  • Reproducibility of Results
  • Research Design*
  • Single-Blind Method
  • Triage*