Critical Care Nurses Inadequately Assess SAPS II Scores of Very Ill Patients in Real Life
Author(s) -
Andréas Perren,
Marco Previsdomini,
I Perren,
Paolo Merlani
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
critical care research and practice
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.532
H-Index - 27
eISSN - 2090-1313
pISSN - 2090-1305
DOI - 10.1155/2012/919106
Subject(s) - medicine , gold standard (test) , logistic regression , mean difference , linear regression , limits of agreement , significant difference , correlation , regression analysis , standard error , saps ii , apache ii , confidence interval , statistics , intensive care unit , nuclear medicine , mathematics , geometry
Background. Reliable ICU severity scores have been achieved by various healthcare workers but nothing is known regarding the accuracy in real life of severity scores registered by untrained nurses. Methods. In this retrospective multicentre audit, three reviewers independently reassessed 120 SAPS II scores. Correlation and agreement of the sum-scores/variables among reviewers and between nurses and the reviewers' gold standard were assessed globally and for tertiles. Bland and Altman (gold standard—nurses) of sum scores and regression of the difference were determined. A logistic regression model identifying risk factors for erroneous assessments was calculated. Results. Correlation for sum scores among reviewers was almost perfect (mean ICC = 0.985). The mean (±SD) nurse-registered SAPS II sum score was 40.3 ± 20.2 versus 44.2 ± 24.9 of the gold standard ( P < 0.002 for difference) with a lower ICC (0.81). Bland and Altman assay was +3.8 ± 27.0 with a significant regression between the difference and the gold standard, indicating overall an overestimation (underestimation) of lower (higher; >32 points) scores. The lowest agreement was found in high SAPS II tertiles for haemodynamics ( k = 0.45–0.51). Conclusions. In real life, nurse-registered SAPS II scores of very ill patients are inaccurate. Accuracy of scores was not associated with nurses' characteristics.
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