1.Current status of pre-hospital and in-hospital emergency medical information connectivity of 13 provincial-level administrative regions in China: a multi-center cross-sectional survey.
Junhong WANG ; Yinzi JIN ; Yi BAI ; Nijiati MUYESAI ; Kang ZHENG ; Qingbian MA
Chinese Critical Care Medicine 2025;37(5):484-489
OBJECTIVE:
To investigate the current status of pre-hospital and in-hospital emergency medical information connectivity in China and provide evidence for optimizing the emergency medical system.
METHODS:
A multi-center cross-sectional study was conducted using a multi-level convenience sampling method to select provincial-level administrative regions and their corresponding capital cities, prefectural cities, and county-level emergency medical institutions. The questionnaire included basic information about respondents, the institutions, the current status of pre-hospital and in-hospital emergency information connectivity, and the satisfaction with the connectivity. The questionnaire has undergone reliability testing and split-half reliability testing, supplemented by semi-structured interviews. Data collection was carried out from January to May 2024, with one responsible person from each institution completing the questionnaire. Multiple Logistic regression analysis to investigated the relevant factors of pre-hospital and in-hospital information connectivity.
RESULTS:
A total of 225 questionnaires were distributed, and 199 valid responses were collected, with a response rate of 88.4%. Participants were from 199 emergency medical institutions across 13 provincial-level administrative regions. Of the institutions, 112 (56.3%) could achieve pre-hospital and in-hospital information connectivity. The proportion of pre-hospital to in-hospital information connection between emergency institutions in different provinces varies (χ2 = 39.398, P < 0.001), with Beijing and Zhejiang having the highest proportion of information connection (both at 100%), and Hainan having the lowest (11.8%). The proportion of information integration in county-level emergency institution was lower than that of provincial and municipal level emergency institutions [40.4% (19/47) vs. 61.7% (29/47), 61.0% (64/105), χ2 = 6.304, P = 0.043]. Provinces with high per capita disposable income have a higher proportion of information connectivity than provinces with low per capita disposable income [77.3% (34/44) vs. 50.3% (78/155), χ2 = 10.122, P = 0.001]. The information connection ratio of independent pre-hospital emergency centers was higher than that of hospital emergency departments/hospital records [74.6% (47/63) vs. 47.8% (65/136), χ2 = 12.581, P < 0.001]. The proportion of information integration in advanced provinces with digital development was higher than that in other provinces [77.6% (38/49) vs. 49.3% (74/150), χ2 = 11.849, P = 0.001]. Logistic regression analysis showed that the per capita disposable income of residents in the province was an independent risk factor for the information connection between pre-hospital and in-hospital emergency institutions [odds ratio (OR) = 3.21, 95% confidence interval was 1.56-6.62, P < 0.01]. 72.3% institutions used the information connection mode for less than 5 years. Telephone and WeChat were the main communication methods (83.0%), and 17.0% of emergency institutions use dedicated APP for communication. 52.7% of respondents were very or relatively satisfied with the information integration before and after the hospital. The main deficiencies in current information integration were insufficient, untimely, inaccurate communication and delayed feedback between pre-hospital and in-hospital information. Optimizing top-level design and improving network quality are the directions for improving the integration of pre-hospital and in-hospital information in the future.
CONCLUSIONS
Pre-hospital and in-hospital emergency information connectivity in some provinces in China remains underdeveloped, with significant regional and institutional disparities. Future efforts should focus on integrating digital technologies and strengthening grassroots-level connectivity systems.
Cross-Sectional Studies
;
China
;
Humans
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Surveys and Questionnaires
;
Emergency Medical Services
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Emergency Service, Hospital
;
Hospital Information Systems
2.Development of mortality prediction model for critically ill patients based on multidimensional and dynamic clinical characteristics.
Shangping ZHAO ; Guanxiu TANG ; Pan LIU ; Yanming GUO ; Mingshi YANG ; Guohui LI
Chinese Critical Care Medicine 2023;35(4):415-420
OBJECTIVE:
To develop a mortality prediction model for critically ill patients based on multidimensional and dynamic clinical data collected by the hospital information system (HIS) using random forest algorithm, and to compare the prediction efficiency of the model with acute physiology and chronic health evaluation II (APACHE II) model.
METHODS:
The clinical data of 10 925 critically ill patients aged over 14 years old admitted to the Third Xiangya Hospital of Central South University from January 2014 to June 2020 were extracted from the HIS system, and APACHE II scores of the critically ill patients were extracted. Expected mortality of patients was calculated according to the death risk calculation formula of APACHE II scoring system. A total of 689 samples with APACHE II score records were used as the test set, and the other 10 236 samples were used to establish the random forest model, of which 10% (n = 1 024) were randomly selected as the validation set and 90% (n = 9 212) were selected as the training set. According to the time series of 3 days before the end of critical illness, the clinical characteristics of patients such as general information, vital signs data, biochemical test results and intravenous drug doses were selected to develope a random forest model for predicting the mortality of critically ill patients. Using the APACHE II model as a reference, receiver operator characteristic curve (ROC curve) was drawn, and the discrimination performance of the model was evaluated through the area under the ROC curve (AUROC). According to the precision and recall, Precision-Recall curve (PR curve) was drawn, and the calibration performance of the model was evaluated through the area under the PR curve (AUPRC). Calibration curve was drawn, and the consistency between the predicted event occurrence probability of the model and the actual occurrence probability was evaluated through the calibration index Brier score.
RESULTS:
Among the 10 925 patients, there were 7 797 males (71.4%) and 3 128 females (28.6%). The average age was (58.9±16.3) years old. The median length of hospital stay was 12 (7, 20) days. Most patients (n = 8 538, 78.2%) were admitted to intensive care unit (ICU), and the median length of ICU stay was 66 (13, 151) hours. The hospitalized mortality was 19.0% (2 077/10 925). Compared with the survival group (n = 8 848), the patients in the death group (n = 2 077) were older (years old: 60.1±16.5 vs. 58.5±16.4, P < 0.01), the ratio of ICU admission was higher [82.8% (1 719/2 077) vs. 77.1% (6 819/8 848), P < 0.01], and the proportion of patients with hypertension, diabetes and stroke history was also higher [44.7% (928/2 077) vs. 36.3% (3 212/8 848), 20.0% (415/2 077) vs. 16.9% (1 495/8 848), 15.5% (322/2 077) vs. 10.0% (885/8 848), all P < 0.01]. In the test set data, the prediction value of random forest model for the risk of death during hospitalization of critically ill patients was greater than that of APACHE II model, which showed by that the AUROC and AUPRC of random forest model were higher than those of APACHE II model [AUROC: 0.856 (95% confidence interval was 0.812-0.896) vs. 0.783 (95% confidence interval was 0.737-0.826), AUPRC: 0.650 (95% confidence interval was 0.604-0.762) vs. 0.524 (95% confidence interval was 0.439-0.609)], and Brier score was lower than that of APACHE II model [0.104 (95% confidence interval was 0.085-0.113) vs. 0.124 (95% confidence interval was 0.107-0.141)].
CONCLUSIONS
The random forest model based on multidimensional dynamic characteristics has great application value in predicting hospital mortality risk for critically ill patients, and it is superior to the traditional APACHE II scoring system.
Female
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Male
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Humans
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Aged
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Adult
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Middle Aged
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Adolescent
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Critical Illness
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Hospitalization
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Length of Stay
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APACHE
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Hospital Information Systems
3.Exploration and Application of ESB High-availability Architecture Construction Based on Hospital Information System.
Zong-Hao HUANG ; Yi WANG ; Zheng-Yuan WANG ; Yun-Fei CAI ; Mo-Ye YU
Chinese Journal of Medical Instrumentation 2022;46(3):342-345
OBJECTIVE:
To solve the ESB bus performance and safety problems caused by the explosive growth of the hospital's business, and to ensure the stable interaction of the hospital's business system.
METHODS:
Taking the construction of our hospital's information system as an example, we used AlwaysOn, load balancing and other technologies to optimize the ESB bus architecture to achieve high availability and scalability of the hospital's ESB bus.
RESULTS:
The ESB bus high-availability architecture effectively eliminates multiple points of failure. Compared with the traditional dual-machine Cluster solution, the security is significantly improved. The nodes based on load balancing can be scaled horizontally according to the growth of the hospital's business volume.
CONCLUSIONS
The construction of the ESB bus high-availability architecture effectively solves the performance and security issues caused by business growth, and provides practical experience for medical information colleagues. It has certain guiding significance for the development of regional medical information.
Hospital Information Systems
;
Information Systems
4.Technical Realization of Integrating Bone Age Artificial Intelligence Assessment System with Hospital RIS-PACS Network.
Lili SHI ; Xiujun YANG ; Guangjun YU ; Shuang LAI ; Zhijun PAN ; Qian WANG
Chinese Journal of Medical Instrumentation 2020;44(5):415-419
OBJECTIVE:
To explore the integration method and technical realization of artificial intelligence bone age assessment system with the hospital RIS-PACS network and workflow.
METHODS:
Two sets of artificial intelligence based on bone age assessment systems (CHBoneAI 1.0/2.0) were developed. The intelligent system was further integrated with RIS-PACS based on the http protocol in Python flask web framework.
RESULTS:
The two sets of systems were successfully integrated into the local network and RIS-PACS in hospital. The deployment has been smoothly running for nearly 3 years. Within the current network setting, it takes less than 3 s to complete bone age assessment for a single patient.
CONCLUSIONS
The artificial intelligence based bone age assessment system has been deployed in clinical RIS-PACS platform and the "running in parallel", which is marking a success of Stage-I and paving the way to Stage-II where the intelligent systems can evolve to become more powerful in particular of the system self-evolution and the "running alternatively".
Age Determination by Skeleton
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Artificial Intelligence
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Bone and Bones
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Hospital Information Systems
;
Hospitals
;
Humans
;
Radiology Information Systems
;
Systems Integration
5.Complex network analysis of combination medication of patients with kidney malignant tumor based in real world.
Ming-Ming ZHAO ; Yan-Ming XIE ; Huan LIU ; Yin ZHANG ; Qi LU ; Yan ZHUANG
China Journal of Chinese Materia Medica 2020;45(14):3299-3306
Kidney malignant tumor is a type of primary renal cell carcinoma, and mainly refers to renal cancer. The incidence of kidney cancer and the number of hospital cases in China have been increasing. Based on the clinical medicine information of patients in the hospital information system(HIS) database of 37 hospitals in China, the combined medication of patients with kidney malignant tumor were analyzed by Tabu search algorithm, so as to analyze the combined medication of patients with kidney malignant tumor in real world. A total of 7 095 patients with kidney malignant tumor were included, the ratio of males to females was 2.11∶1, and the ratio of male patients increased gradually with age. About 3 933 patients(55.43%) showed a superior effect among those patients. The common therapies of patients with kidney malignant tumor were anti-tumor therapies and symptomatic therapies, including anti-infection, regulation of electrolyte balance, sedation and analgesia, analgesic, regulation of gastrointestinal function. The whole population of patients with kidney malignant tumor were mostly treated with anti-tumor drugs combined with more symptomatic therapies, while the anti-tumor therapies of the superiority population of patients were less combined with other drugs, with less combined medication. The result may be related to the stage of tumor or individual response to the therapeutic regimen. No matter for the whole population or for the superiority population of patients with kidney malignant tumor, the therapies was mainly Western medicines. Based on the pathogenesis of deficiency in origin and excess in superficiality with kidney malignant tumor, Chinese subgroups with formula for clearing heat and removing toxicity, formula for vigorate Qi and replenish the blood, formula for regulate Qi and invigorate the blood, laxative and hemostatic were more commonly used. In the future, further studies shall be conducted for combined therapies for patients of different stages, so as to play the advantages of multi-target, overall regulation, toxicity reduction and efficacy enhancement of traditional Chinese medicine, improve the life quality of patients with kidney malignant tumor, prolong their life time, and improve the survival rate of patients.
Asian Continental Ancestry Group
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China
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Drugs, Chinese Herbal
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Female
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Hospital Information Systems
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Humans
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Kidney Neoplasms
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Male
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Medicine, Chinese Traditional
6.Risk Factor Analysis of Extended Opioid Use after Coronary Artery Bypass Grafting: A Clinical Data Warehouse-Based Study
Jiwon KANG ; Jae Hun KIM ; Kyung Hyun LEE ; Woo Seok LEE ; Hyoung Woo CHANG ; Jun Sung KIM ; Kay Hyun PARK ; Cheong LIM
Healthcare Informatics Research 2019;25(2):124-130
OBJECTIVES: A clinical data warehouse (CDW) is part of our hospital information system, and it provides user-friendly ‘data search and extraction’ interfaces for query composition. We carried out a risk factor analysis for the extended use of opioids after coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG), taking advantage of the CDW system. METHODS: From 2015 to 2017, clinical data from 461 patients who had undergone either isolated or concomitant CABG were extracted using the CDW; the extracted data included baseline patient characteristics, various examination results, and opioid prescription information. Supplementary data that could not be extracted with the CDW were collected via manual review of the electronic medical records. RESULTS: Data from a total of 447 patients were analyzed finally. The mean patient age was 66.8 ± 10.9 years, 332 patients (74%) were male, and 235 patients (53%) had diabetes. Among the 447 patients, 90 patients (20.1%) took some type of opioid at the 15th postoperative day. An oral rapid-acting agent was the most frequently used opioid (83%). In the risk factor analysis for extended opioid use, duration of operation was the only significant risk factor (odds ratio = 1.004; 95% confidence interval, 1.001–1.007; p = 0.008). CONCLUSIONS: Longer operation time was associated with the risk of extended opioid use after CABG. CDW was a helpful tool for extracting mass clinical data rapidly, but to maximize its utility, the data should be checked carefully as they are entered in the system so that post-processing can be minimized. Further refinement of the clinical data input and output interface is warranted.
Analgesics, Opioid
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Coronary Artery Bypass
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Coronary Vessels
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Database Management Systems
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Electronic Health Records
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Hospital Information Systems
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Humans
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Male
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Prescriptions
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Risk Factors
7.Evaluation of User Experience of New Defense Medical Information System
Healthcare Informatics Research 2019;25(2):73-81
OBJECTIVES: This study aimed to investigate the user experience (UX) of the New Defense Medical Information System (N-DEMIS), which was introduced in 2012 as part of an effort to improve the old system of armed forces hospitals and ultimately bring their standards up to those of civilian hospitals. METHODS: In this study, the dependent variable was the UX of N-DEMIS and was composed of usability, affect, and user value. The questionnaire comprised 41 questions: nine on general characteristics, 20 on usability, four on affect, and eight on user value. The data collection period was from April 15 to April 30, 2018. Overall, 85 responses were received; of these, three insincere responses were excluded, and the remaining 82 responses were used in the analysis. RESULTS: The overall value of Cronbach's alpha was 0.917, indicating an overall high-reliability. There was a significant difference between user value and usability, but there was no significant differences between the other pairs. We observed a significant effect on UX for length of time working in an armed forces hospital and employment type. CONCLUSIONS: The results of our survey showed an even distribution of scores across the three elements of UX, showing that no particular aspect of N-DEMIS is superior to the others in terms of user satisfaction. However, the overall UX score of around 60% indicates the need for future improvements. Rather than focusing improvements on a specific area, improvements should be spread across usability, affect, and user value.
Arm
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Data Collection
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Electronic Health Records
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Employment
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Hospital Information Systems
;
Information Systems
;
Personal Satisfaction
;
User-Computer Interface
8.Changes in Relative Importance of the 5-Level Triage System, Korean Triage and Acuity Scale, for the Disposition of Emergency Patients Induced by Forced Reduction in Its Level Number: a Multi-Center Registry-based Retrospective Cohort Study
Ji Ho RYU ; Mun Ki MIN ; Dae Sup LEE ; Seok Ran YEOM ; Seong Hwa LEE ; Il Jae WANG ; Suck Ju CHO ; Seong Youn HWANG ; Jun Ho LEE ; Yong Hwan KIM
Journal of Korean Medical Science 2019;34(14):e114-
BACKGROUND: The 5-level triage tool, the Korean Triage and Acuity Scale (KTAS), was developed based on the Canadian Triage and Acuity Scale and has been used for triage in all emergency medical institutions in Korea since 2016. This study evaluated the association between the decrease in level number and the change in its relative importance for disposition in the emergency department (ED). METHODS: Using the registry of the National Emergency Department Information System (NEDIS) ver. 3.1, data regarding consecutive emergency patients from March 2017 to October 2017 were reviewed retrospectively. Reconfiguring KTAS levels, a total of 15 multinomial logistic regression models (KTAS_0 to KTAS_14), including the KTAS, its variants, and covariates were constructed to determine significant factors affecting ED disposition. The relative importance of each model was obtained using a dominance analysis. RESULTS: A total of 79,771 patients were included in the analysis. In the model KTAS_0, the KTAS and 8 covariates were found to be significantly related to ED disposition. The KTAS and the decision maker of each ED visit, whether it was the physician or others, had the largest relative importance, 34.8% and 31.4%, respectively (P < 0.001). In other models of KTAS variants, including 4-level, 3-level and 2-level, the rates of the KTAS decreased to 31.8% (interquartile range [IQR], 28.9–34.2), 26.4% (IQR, 23.2–31.0), and 18.7% (IQR, 7.5–24.9), respectively (P = 0.016). On the other hand, the rates for covariates tended to be larger for smaller triage levels and so there was a significant interaction effect between the KTAS and the covariates according to the triage level (P < 0.001). CONCLUSION: The 5-level triage tool, the KTAS, had the largest relative importance among the predictors affecting ED disposition only at its original level. Therefore, it is recommended that no attempt should be made to reduce the number of levels in the triage tool.
Cohort Studies
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Emergencies
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Emergency Service, Hospital
;
Hand
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Humans
;
Information Systems
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Korea
;
Logistic Models
;
Registries
;
Retrospective Studies
;
Triage
9.‘Pneumonia Weather’: Short-term Effects of Meteorological Factors on Emergency Room Visits Due to Pneumonia in Seoul, Korea
Sangho SOHN ; Wonju CHO ; Jin A KIM ; Alaa ALTALUONI ; Kwan HONG ; Byung Chul CHUN
Korean Journal of Preventive Medicine 2019;52(2):82-91
OBJECTIVES: Many studies have explored the relationship between short-term weather and its health effects (including pneumonia) based on mortality, although both morbidity and mortality pose a substantial burden. In this study, the authors aimed to describe the influence of meteorological factors on the number of emergency room (ER) visits due to pneumonia in Seoul, Korea. METHODS: Daily records of ER visits for pneumonia over a 6-year period (2009-2014) were collected from the National Emergency Department Information System. Corresponding meteorological data were obtained from the National Climate Data Service System. A generalized additive model was used to analyze the effects. The percent change in the relative risk of certain meteorological variables, including pneumonia temperature (defined as the change in average temperature from one day to the next), were estimated for specific age groups. RESULTS: A total of 217 776 ER visits for pneumonia were identified. The additional risk associated with a 1°C increase in pneumonia temperature above the threshold of 6°C was 1.89 (95% confidence interval [CI], 1.37 to 2.61). Average temperature and diurnal temperature range, representing within-day temperature variance, showed protective effects of 0.07 (95% CI, 0.92 to 0.93) and 0.04 (95% CI, 0.94 to 0.98), respectively. However, in the elderly (65+ years), the effect of pneumonia temperature was inconclusive, and the directionality of the effects of average temperature and diurnal temperature range differed. CONCLUSIONS: The term ‘pneumonia temperature’ is valid. Pneumonia temperature was associated with an increased risk of ER visits for pneumonia, while warm average temperatures and large diurnal temperature ranges showed protective effects.
Aged
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Climate
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Emergencies
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Emergency Service, Hospital
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Humans
;
Information Systems
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Korea
;
Meteorological Concepts
;
Mortality
;
Pneumonia
;
Public Health
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Seoul
;
Weather
10.Evaluation of Validity of the Korean Triage and Acuity Scale
Heejung CHOI ; Jong Sun OK ; Soo Young AN
Journal of Korean Academy of Nursing 2019;49(1):26-35
PURPOSE: The aim of this study was to identify the predictive validity of the Korean Triage and Acuity Scale (KTAS). METHODS: This methodological study used data from National Emergency Department Information System for 2016. The KTAS disposition and emergency treatment results for emergency patients aged 15 years and older were analyzed to evaluate its predictive validity through its sensitivity, specificity, positive predictive value, and negative predictive value. RESULTS: In case of death in the emergency department, or where the intensive care unit admission was considered an emergency, the sensitivity, specificity, positive predictive value, and negative predictive value of the KTAS were 0.916, 0.581, 0.097, and 0.993, respectively. In case of death in the emergency department, or where the intensive or non-intensive care unit admission was considered an emergency, the sensitivity, specificity, and positive predictive value, and negative predictive value were 0.700, 0.642, 0.391, and 0.867, respectively. CONCLUSION: The results of this study showed that the KTAS had high sensitivity but low specificity. It is necessary to constantly review and revise the KTAS level classification because it still results in a few errors of under and over-triage. Nevertheless, this study is meaningful in that it was an evaluation of the KTAS for the total cases of adult patients who sought help at regional and local emergency medical centers in 2016.
Adult
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Classification
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Emergencies
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Emergency Service, Hospital
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Emergency Treatment
;
Humans
;
Information Systems
;
Intensive Care Units
;
Methods
;
Sensitivity and Specificity
;
Triage

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