Evaluation of Provider Assessment of Clinical History When Using the HEART Score.

IF 1.5 Q3 EMERGENCY MEDICINE
Open Access Emergency Medicine Pub Date : 2022-08-04 eCollection Date: 2022-01-01 DOI:10.2147/OAEM.S371502
Ravindra Gopaul, Robert A Waller, Ricci Kalayanamitra, Garrett Rucker, Andrew Foy
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Objective: The HEART Score is a clinically validated risk stratification tool for patients with chest pain. Using five parameters (History, Electrocardiogram, Age, Risk factors, and Troponin), this instrument categorizes patients as low, moderate, or high risk for major adverse cardiac events within six weeks after evaluation. Of these parameters, History is the most subjective, as providers independently assign their level of clinical suspicion. Overestimation of history, and ultimately the HEART Score, can result in increased resource utilization, expense, and patient risk. We sought to evaluate bias in provider assessment of history when determining the HEART Score.

Methods: Emergency medicine (EM) and Cardiology providers received surveys with one of two versions of clinical vignettes randomized at the question level and were asked to estimate the history component of the HEART Score. Vignettes differed by age, risk factors, sex, and socioeconomic status (SES), but both versions should have received the same score for history. Statistical analysis was then used to assess differences in history assessment between vignettes.

Results: Of the 884 responses analyzed, most providers overestimated the historical portion of the HEART Score when assessing risk factors, patient distress, age, and lower SES. Many underestimated history with knowledge of a previous negative stress test. When controlling for specialty, the universal theme was overestimation by EM providers and underestimation by cardiologists. Despite the presence of hypertension, gender differences, and the appearance of mild distress, cardiologists were more likely to correctly estimate history compared to EM providers. SES consideration generally led to an underestimation of history by cardiologists. These findings were all statistically significant.

Conclusion: Our study demonstrates that both EM and cardiology providers overestimate history when considering prognosticators that are frequently viewed as concerning. Further education on proper usage of the HEART Score is needed for more appropriate scoring of history and improved resource allocation for hospital systems.

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在使用HEART评分时对提供者临床病史评估的评价。
目的:HEART评分是临床验证的胸痛患者风险分层工具。使用5个参数(病史、心电图、年龄、危险因素和肌钙蛋白),该仪器在评估后6周内将患者分为低、中、高风险的主要心脏不良事件。在这些参数中,病史是最主观的,因为提供者独立地分配他们的临床怀疑水平。过高估计病史,以及最终的HEART评分,可能导致资源利用率、费用和患者风险的增加。在确定心脏评分时,我们试图评估提供者评估病史的偏倚。方法:急诊医学(EM)和心脏病学提供者接受了两种版本的临床小插曲之一的调查,并被要求估计心脏评分的历史成分。小插曲因年龄、危险因素、性别和社会经济地位(SES)而异,但两种版本的历史评分应该相同。然后使用统计分析来评估小插曲之间的历史评估差异。结果:在分析的884份回复中,大多数提供者在评估风险因素、患者窘迫、年龄和较低的社会经济地位时高估了HEART评分的历史部分。许多人低估了以往负压力测试的历史。当控制专科时,普遍的主题是EM提供者高估和心脏病专家低估。尽管存在高血压、性别差异和轻度窘迫的出现,与急诊医生相比,心脏病专家更有可能正确估计病史。SES的考虑通常导致心脏病学家对病史的低估。这些发现都具有统计学意义。结论:我们的研究表明,在考虑经常被视为相关的预后因素时,EM和心脏病学提供者都高估了病史。需要进一步教育如何正确使用HEART评分,以便更恰当地对病史进行评分,并改善医院系统的资源分配。
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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来源期刊
Open Access Emergency Medicine
Open Access Emergency Medicine EMERGENCY MEDICINE-
CiteScore
2.60
自引率
6.70%
发文量
85
审稿时长
16 weeks
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