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ABILITY OF ADULT PATIENTS TO PREDICT ABSENCE OR PRESENCE OF FEVER IN AN EMERGENCY DEPARTMENT TRIAGE CLINIC

INTRODUCTION: Fever is the most appreciated manifestation of disease which usually raises high therapeutic expectations. Patients seek medical advice because they think they are sick and feverish. If they feel that they are sick but not feverish, they may not seek medical advice. Subjective fever ma...

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Autor principal: Al-Almaie, Sameeh M.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Medknow Publications & Media Pvt Ltd 1999
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3437071/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23008594
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author Al-Almaie, Sameeh M.
author_facet Al-Almaie, Sameeh M.
author_sort Al-Almaie, Sameeh M.
collection PubMed
description INTRODUCTION: Fever is the most appreciated manifestation of disease which usually raises high therapeutic expectations. Patients seek medical advice because they think they are sick and feverish. If they feel that they are sick but not feverish, they may not seek medical advice. Subjective fever may also be an important clue to further evaluation of the patient. OBJECTIVE: The aim of this study was to assess the reliability of adult patients to predict absence or presence of fever in Emergency Department triage clinic. METHODS: A prospective study of 1241 ambulatory adult patients (above 12 years of age) was carried out over a three-week period. All patients were asked whether or not they had fever or felt they had fever or were running a temperature before oral temperature was taken with an IVAC digital machine. Two sets of temperature readings were taken to define fever as 37.8°C or greater, and 38.0°C or greater. RESULTS: The sensitivity and specificity of detecting fever by subjective means was 89.6% and 94.5% for male and 90.0% and 94.8% for female. The accuracy rates were 93.9% and 94.6% respectively. The prevalence of objective fever was 8.7% yielding general positive and negative predictive values of 80.9% and 98.9% with an accuracy rate of 94.2%. CONCLUSION: The reliability of adult patients attending triage clinic in assessing subjective fever was found to be good. Four out of five of our patients who believed they had a fever were actually found to have an objective temperature increase (38.0°C or greater). This means that medical staff should take a complaint of subjective fever in our population more seriously.
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spelling pubmed-34370712012-09-24 ABILITY OF ADULT PATIENTS TO PREDICT ABSENCE OR PRESENCE OF FEVER IN AN EMERGENCY DEPARTMENT TRIAGE CLINIC Al-Almaie, Sameeh M. J Family Community Med Leading Article INTRODUCTION: Fever is the most appreciated manifestation of disease which usually raises high therapeutic expectations. Patients seek medical advice because they think they are sick and feverish. If they feel that they are sick but not feverish, they may not seek medical advice. Subjective fever may also be an important clue to further evaluation of the patient. OBJECTIVE: The aim of this study was to assess the reliability of adult patients to predict absence or presence of fever in Emergency Department triage clinic. METHODS: A prospective study of 1241 ambulatory adult patients (above 12 years of age) was carried out over a three-week period. All patients were asked whether or not they had fever or felt they had fever or were running a temperature before oral temperature was taken with an IVAC digital machine. Two sets of temperature readings were taken to define fever as 37.8°C or greater, and 38.0°C or greater. RESULTS: The sensitivity and specificity of detecting fever by subjective means was 89.6% and 94.5% for male and 90.0% and 94.8% for female. The accuracy rates were 93.9% and 94.6% respectively. The prevalence of objective fever was 8.7% yielding general positive and negative predictive values of 80.9% and 98.9% with an accuracy rate of 94.2%. CONCLUSION: The reliability of adult patients attending triage clinic in assessing subjective fever was found to be good. Four out of five of our patients who believed they had a fever were actually found to have an objective temperature increase (38.0°C or greater). This means that medical staff should take a complaint of subjective fever in our population more seriously. Medknow Publications & Media Pvt Ltd 1999 /pmc/articles/PMC3437071/ /pubmed/23008594 Text en Copyright: © Journal of Family and Community Medicine http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/3.0 This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike 3.0 Unported, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Leading Article
Al-Almaie, Sameeh M.
ABILITY OF ADULT PATIENTS TO PREDICT ABSENCE OR PRESENCE OF FEVER IN AN EMERGENCY DEPARTMENT TRIAGE CLINIC
title ABILITY OF ADULT PATIENTS TO PREDICT ABSENCE OR PRESENCE OF FEVER IN AN EMERGENCY DEPARTMENT TRIAGE CLINIC
title_full ABILITY OF ADULT PATIENTS TO PREDICT ABSENCE OR PRESENCE OF FEVER IN AN EMERGENCY DEPARTMENT TRIAGE CLINIC
title_fullStr ABILITY OF ADULT PATIENTS TO PREDICT ABSENCE OR PRESENCE OF FEVER IN AN EMERGENCY DEPARTMENT TRIAGE CLINIC
title_full_unstemmed ABILITY OF ADULT PATIENTS TO PREDICT ABSENCE OR PRESENCE OF FEVER IN AN EMERGENCY DEPARTMENT TRIAGE CLINIC
title_short ABILITY OF ADULT PATIENTS TO PREDICT ABSENCE OR PRESENCE OF FEVER IN AN EMERGENCY DEPARTMENT TRIAGE CLINIC
title_sort ability of adult patients to predict absence or presence of fever in an emergency department triage clinic
topic Leading Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3437071/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23008594
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