Quality of clinical aspects of call handling at Dutch out of hours centres: cross sectional national study
Open Access
- 12 September 2008
- Vol. 337 (sep12 1) , a1264
- https://doi.org/10.1136/bmj.a1264
Abstract
Objective To assess the quality of telephone triage by following the consecutive phases of its care process and the quality of the clinical questions asked about the patient’s clinical condition, of the triage outcome, of the content of the home management advice, and of the safety net advice given at out of hours centres.Design Cross sectional national study using telephone incognito standardised patients. Setting The Netherlands.Participants 17 out of hours centres.Main outcome measures Percentages of clinical obligatory questions asked and items within home management and safety net advice, both in relation to pre-agreed standards, and of care advice given in relation to the required care advice.Results The telephone incognito standardised patients presented seven clinical cases three times each over a period of 12 months, making a total of 357 calls. The mean percentage of obligatory questions asked compared with the standard was 21%. Answers to questions about the clinical condition were not always correctly evaluated from a clinical viewpoint, either by triagists or by general practitioners. The quality of information on home management and safety net advice varied, but it was consistently poor for all cases and for all out of hours centres. Triagists achieved the appropriate triage outcome in 58% of calls.Conclusion In determining the outcome of the care process, triagists often reached a conclusion after asking a minimal number of questions. By analysing the quality of different phases within the process of telephone triage, evaluation of whether an appropriate triage outcome has been arrived at by means of good clinical reasoning or by an educated guess is possible. In terms of enhancing the overall clinical safety of telephone triage, apart from obtaining an appropriate clinical history, adequate home management and safety net advice must also be given.Keywords
This publication has 28 references indexed in Scilit:
- Out-of-hours primary care: development of indicators for prescribing and referringInternational Journal for Quality in Health Care, 2007
- Unannounced standardised patients in real practice: a systematic literature reviewMedical Education, 2007
- Epistaxis: Diagnosis and TreatmentJournal of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery, 2006
- Nursing Telephone Triage and Its Influence on Parents' Choice of Care for Febrile ChildrenJournal of Pediatric Nursing, 2005
- What makes a good clinical decision support systemBMJ, 2005
- Improving clinical practice using clinical decision support systems: a systematic review of trials to identify features critical to successBMJ, 2005
- Improving quality and safety of telephone based delivery of care: teaching telephone consultation skillsQuality and Safety in Health Care, 2004
- The relationship between competence and performance: implications for assessing practice performanceMedical Education, 2002
- Conseils téléphoniques donnés aux urgences pour un cas pédiatrique simuléArchives de Pédiatrie, 1996
- Decision-making Strategies for Telephone Triage in Emergency Medical ServicesMedical Decision Making, 1995