×
Home
Archive Submission Guidelines
News Contact
Original article
Crossmark

Effect of emergency severity index implementation on the waiting time for patients to receive health services in the emergency department

By
Akbar Sarvari ,
Akbar Sarvari
Hosein Habibzadeh ,
Hosein Habibzadeh
Leyla Alilu ,
Leyla Alilu
Naser Sheikhi
Naser Sheikhi

Abstract

The waiting time for patients in the emergency department to receive health services influences many processes in this department. This research aimed to determine the effect of implementation and deployment of emergency severity index (ESI) on the waiting time for patients to receive health services in the emergency department. This quasi-experimental study was performed on 736 patients who were referred to the emergency department of Imam Khomeini Hospital of Mahabad. For the ESI triage implementation, 368 patients were assigned to the pre-intervention group and 368 patients were selected for the post-intervention group, using a simple random sampling. Before and after the ESI triage implementation, the waiting time for patients to receive services was measured and recorded using a chronometer. For data analysis, Chi-square, Mann-Whitney and Kruskal-Wallis tests were used. Before and after the intervention, both groups were homogeneous in terms of demographic variables (p > 0.05). The results of Mann-Whitney test indicate that implementation of emergency severity index (ESI) has a positive effect on the decrease of average time intervals to provide health services, as well as on the entire length of stay in the emergency department (p < 0.05). Given the effect of the ESI triage implementation that reduced the waiting time for patients to receive health services, ESI is recommended for training nurses and other emergency staff.

References

1.
Rahmani F, Sepehri Majd P, Ebrahimi Bakhtavar H, Rahmani F. Evaluating the accuracy of emergency nurses in correct triage using emergency severity index triage in Sina hospital of Tabriz: a cross-sectional analysis. Journal of Emergency Practice and Trauma. 4(1):9–13.
2.
Yuksen C, Sawatmongkornkul S, Suttabuth S, Sawanyawisuth K, Sittichanbuncha Y. Emergency severity index compared with 4-level triage at the emergency department of Ramathibodi University Hospital. Asian Biomedicine. 2017;10(2):155–61.
3.
Downey LVA, Zun LS, Burke T. Comparison of Canadian triage acuity scale to Australian Emergency Mental Health Scale triage system for psychiatric patients. International Emergency Nursing. 2015;23(2):138–43.
4.
Daemi A, Pourasghar F, Tabrizi J, Ala A, Jafarabadi M. Validity of the emergency severity index in predicting patient outcomes in a major emergency department. Journal of Nursing and Midwifery Sciences. 2016;3(1):1.
5.
Wong HJ, Morra D, Caesar M, Carter MW, Abrams H. Understanding hospital and emergency department congestion: an examination of inpatient admission trends and bed resources. CJEM. 2010;12(01):18–26.

Citation

Article metrics

Google scholar: See link

Citations

Crossref Logo

2

Crossref Logo

I Putu Juni Andika, Ratna Indriati, Diyono, Tunjung Sri Yulianti, Istichomah, Budi Kristanto, Sri Aminingsih, Ditya Yankusuma Setiani, Warsini

(2025)

Effectiveness of the Emergency Saverity Index (ESI) Triage Used in Health Service ? A Literature Review

Malaysian Journal of Medicine and Health Sciences, 21(s3)

10.47836/mjmhs.21.s3.36

Crossref Logo

Patcharawan Narongsanoi, Samoraphop Banharak, Ladawan Panpanit, Sutin Chanaboon, Jintana Damkliang

(2024)

Factors related to changes in severity among adult and older adult patients at an internal medicine department clinic: an embedded mixed-method study

Scientific Reports, 14(1)

10.1038/s41598-024-54266-8

The statements, opinions and data contained in the journal are solely those of the individual authors and contributors and not of the publisher and the editor(s). We stay neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations.