| danish.ed.validation | R Documentation |
Data from a prospective cohort study of triage scoring for an emergency department (ED). The study examined whether the use of patient level measurements would improve an existing triage score. These data were used as a test set (called validation in the manuscript) to examine the performance of the model built using the training (primary) cohort. Some variable names have been changed for readability and for consistency with the primary dataset, but the data on 18 variables for the 6,383 participants are otherwise unchanged. Some variables in the primary dataset do not appear in these data.
danish.ed.validation
A tibble with 6383 rows and 18 variables:
mort30numeric, 1 if patient died within 30 days of admission, 0 otherwise
triagefactor, triage score given at arrival to ED.
Values blue, green, yellow, orange, red,
from lowest to highest priority
for treatment. The value blue normally denotes severity not
warranting admission to the ED. Participants coded blue
are in these data but not in the primary data.
agenumeric, age in years, rounded to lower integer
sexfactor, female, male
albuminnumeric, serum albumin, in g/L
creatininenumeric, serum creatinine, in umol/L
hemaglobinnumeric, serum hemaglobin, in mmol/L
potassiumnumeric, serum potassium, in mmol/L
leuk.countblood leukocyte count, in 10E9/L
sodiumnumeric, serum sodium, in mmol/L
c.react.proteinnumeric, serum C-reactive protein
oxygen.satnumeric, peripheral arterial oxygen saturation, %
resp.ratenumeric, respiratory rate per minute
heart.ratenumeric, heart rate, beats/min
systolic.bpnumeric, systolic blood pressure, in mmHg
readmit.hospfactor, readmitted to hospital within 30 days,
with values yes, no
days.in.hospnumeric, number of days admitted to hospital
icu.statusfactor, patient admitted to ICU, with values
yes, no
Kristensen, Michael, et al. "Routine blood tests are associated with short term mortality and can improve emergency department triage: a cohort study of> 12,000 patients." Scandinavian Journal of Trauma, Resuscitation and Emergency Medicine 25 (2017): 1-8. https://sjtrem.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s13049-017-0458-x?report=reader
Add the following code to your website.
For more information on customizing the embed code, read Embedding Snippets.