Major influence of interobserver reliability on polytrauma identification with the Injury Severity Score (ISS): Time for a centralised coding in trauma registries?

التفاصيل البيبلوغرافية
العنوان: Major influence of interobserver reliability on polytrauma identification with the Injury Severity Score (ISS): Time for a centralised coding in trauma registries?
المؤلفون: Patrick Kugelmeier, Roman Maduz, Christoph Meier, Robert Döring, Peter Wahl, Severin Meili
المصدر: Injury. 48:885-889
بيانات النشر: Elsevier BV, 2017.
سنة النشر: 2017
مصطلحات موضوعية: medicine.medical_specialty, Interobserver reliability, 03 medical and health sciences, Injury Severity Score, 0302 clinical medicine, Trauma Centers, medicine, Humans, Prospective Studies, Registries, 030212 general & internal medicine, Child, Prospective cohort study, General Environmental Science, Abbreviated Injury Scale, Multiple Trauma, business.industry, Clinical Coding, Reproducibility of Results, 030208 emergency & critical care medicine, medicine.disease, Polytrauma, Benchmarking, Cohort, Physical therapy, General Earth and Planetary Sciences, Body region, Clinical Competence, business, Switzerland, Coding (social sciences)
الوصف: Objective The Abbreviated Injury Scale (AIS) and the Injury Severity Score (ISS) find increasingly widespread use to assess trauma burden and to perform interhospital benchmarking through trauma registries. Since 2015, public resource allocation in Switzerland shall even be derived from such data. As every trauma centre is responsible for its own coding and data input, this study aims at evaluating interobserver reliability of AIS and ISS coding. Methods Interobserver reliability of the AIS and ISS is analysed from a cohort of 50 consecutive severely injured patients treated in 2012 at our institution, coded retrospectively by 3 independent and specifically trained observers. Results Considering a cutoff ISS ≥ 16, only 38/50 patients (76%) were uniformly identified as polytraumatised or not. Increasing the cut off to ≥20, this increased to 41/50 patients (82%). A difference in the AIS of ≥ 1 was present in 261 (16%) of possible codes. Excluding the vast majority of uninjured body regions, uniformly identical AIS severity values were attributed in 67/193 (35%) body regions, or 318/579 (55%) possible observer pairings. Conclusion Injury severity all too often is neither identified correctly nor consistently when using the AIS. This leads to wrong identification of severely injured patients using the ISS. Improving consistency of coding through centralisation is recommended before scores based on the AIS are to be used for interhospital benchmarking and resource allocation in the treatment of severely injured patients.
تدمد: 0020-1383
الوصول الحر: https://explore.openaire.eu/search/publication?articleId=doi_dedup___::de9a3b2435fa88c54593e5db636cf124Test
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.injury.2017.02.015Test
حقوق: CLOSED
رقم الانضمام: edsair.doi.dedup.....de9a3b2435fa88c54593e5db636cf124
قاعدة البيانات: OpenAIRE