• J Trauma · Oct 1991

    Comparative Study

    A comparison of EMT judgment and prehospital trauma triage instruments.

    • C L Emerman, B Shade, and J Kubincanek.
    • Department of Emergency Medicine, MetroHealth Medical Center, Cleveland, OH 44109.
    • J Trauma. 1991 Oct 1;31(10):1369-75.

    AbstractA number of instruments have been devised to aid in the triage of trauma patients. Little work, however, has been done to demonstrate that these triage instruments offer an advantage over the judgment of an emergency medical technician (EMT) in determining which patients require transportation to a trauma center. The purpose of this study was to compare EMT judgment against three scoring systems; the triage-revised Trauma Score, the Prehospital Index, and the CRAMS scale. Data were gathered on trauma victims transported by the City of Cleveland EMS system. The EMTs rated the patient's overall severity on a 4-point scale and estimated the probability of patient mortality. We found that the EMT prediction of mortality was as accurate as the various scores. In a subset of patients, we also found that the EMT assessment performed as well as the scoring systems in identifying patients who either died or required emergent operative intervention. We conclude that EMT judgment is as accurate as these three scoring systems in identifying patients at high risk for death or the need for immediate operative intervention.

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