急诊护士分诊叙述资料的使用与结构:范围回顾。

JMIR nursing Pub Date : 2023-01-13 DOI:10.2196/41331
Christopher Picard, Manal Kleib, Colleen Norris, Hannah M O'Rourke, Carmel Montgomery, Matthew Douma
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:急诊科使用分诊,以确保患者的最高水平的敏锐度得到快速和安全的护理。分类是一个典型的护理过程,记录为结构化和非结构化(自由文本)数据。自由文本分类叙述已经研究过具体情况,但从未全面审查过。目的:本文的目的是识别和绘制学术文献,检查分诊叙述。本文描述了所进行的研究类型,确定了研究中的差距,并确定了可能需要进行额外审查的地方。方法:我们对非结构化分诊叙述进行了范围审查。我们绘制了文献图,描述了分类叙事数据的使用,检查了关于叙事形式和结构的可用信息,强调了出版物之间的相似性,并确定了未来研究的机会。结果:我们筛选了1990年至2022年间在CINAHL、MEDLINE、Embase、Cochrane和ProQuest Central发表的18074项研究。我们确定了0.53%(96/18,074)的研究直接检查了分诊护士叙述的使用。审查中包括的2438个急诊科就诊人数超过1200万人次。总的来说,82%(79/96)的研究是在美国(43/ 96,45%)、澳大利亚(31/ 96,32%)或加拿大(5/ 96,5%)进行的。分诊叙述用于研究和病例识别,作为预测建模的输入变量,并用于质量改进。总体而言,31%(30/96)的研究提供了分类叙述的描述,包括使用的关键字列表(27/96,28%)或更繁琐的描述(如单词计数、字符计数、缩写等);7/96, 7%)。我们发现报告指南的使用有限(8/ 96,8 %)。结论:确定的研究的广度表明,有广泛的常规收集和研究使用分类叙事数据。尽管在研究中使用分诊叙述作为数据来源,但文献中对叙述和产生叙述的护士的描述很差,数据报告也不一致。需要进一步的研究来描述分诊叙述的结构,确定分诊叙述的最佳使用,并改进分诊特定数据报告指南的一致性使用。国际注册报告标识符(irrid): RR2-10.1136/bmjopen-2021-055132。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

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The Use and Structure of Emergency Nurses' Triage Narrative Data: Scoping Review.

Background: Emergency departments use triage to ensure that patients with the highest level of acuity receive care quickly and safely. Triage is typically a nursing process that is documented as structured and unstructured (free text) data. Free-text triage narratives have been studied for specific conditions but never reviewed in a comprehensive manner.

Objective: The objective of this paper was to identify and map the academic literature that examines triage narratives. The paper described the types of research conducted, identified gaps in the research, and determined where additional review may be warranted.

Methods: We conducted a scoping review of unstructured triage narratives. We mapped the literature, described the use of triage narrative data, examined the information available on the form and structure of narratives, highlighted similarities among publications, and identified opportunities for future research.

Results: We screened 18,074 studies published between 1990 and 2022 in CINAHL, MEDLINE, Embase, Cochrane, and ProQuest Central. We identified 0.53% (96/18,074) of studies that directly examined the use of triage nurses' narratives. More than 12 million visits were made to 2438 emergency departments included in the review. In total, 82% (79/96) of these studies were conducted in the United States (43/96, 45%), Australia (31/96, 32%), or Canada (5/96, 5%). Triage narratives were used for research and case identification, as input variables for predictive modeling, and for quality improvement. Overall, 31% (30/96) of the studies offered a description of the triage narrative, including a list of the keywords used (27/96, 28%) or more fulsome descriptions (such as word counts, character counts, abbreviation, etc; 7/96, 7%). We found limited use of reporting guidelines (8/96, 8%).

Conclusions: The breadth of the identified studies suggests that there is widespread routine collection and research use of triage narrative data. Despite the use of triage narratives as a source of data in studies, the narratives and nurses who generate them are poorly described in the literature, and data reporting is inconsistent. Additional research is needed to describe the structure of triage narratives, determine the best use of triage narratives, and improve the consistent use of triage-specific data reporting guidelines.

International registered report identifier (irrid): RR2-10.1136/bmjopen-2021-055132.

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16 weeks
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