The educational needs of triage nurses

Andrea Thawley 1, Christina Aggar 2, Noelene Williams 1

Abstract

The role of triage nurses is critical to ensuring patient safety and timely access to emergency care. Continuing professional development and ongoing support is required to effectively support the competence of triage staff. To date, very few studies have sought to describe the educational needs of triage nurses.

This study aimed to identify which type of educational support nurses feel they need to manage the triage process.

A validated questionnaire was used to explore triage nurses' perceived educational support needs in relation to managing the triage process.

On average, participants had 11.33 years of experience in their current role (SD = 7.27), 15.43 in emergency (SD = 9.80) and 13.44 in triage (SD = 9.16 ). Triage nurses (n = 27) identified the introduction of new ideas at triage to increase efficiency as the area in which they were in greatest need of training. Priority education needs that focused on clinical tasks, such as physical assessment skills, particularly in relation to observations and vital signs, to inform triage decision making were also identified. These priority education needs will inform the design of education programs and the development of the capabilities of the nursing workforce.

Future research should seek to explore the traditional responsibilities of triage nurses, particularly to address queuing and delays at triage.

Keywords: triage, emergency, education, patient flow, Emergency Triage Education Kit.

1 The Tweed Hospital, Tweed Heads, Australia

2 Southern Cross University, Bilinga Australia

Corresponding author: Andrea Thawley, The Tweed Hospital, PO Box 904, Tweed Heads, NSW 2485, Australia, [email protected]


Introduction

Patient safety and timely access to care in the emergency department (ED) relies upon the experience, education and training of ED nurses, including in the area of triage. Novice ED nurses require structured education and mentorship (Hitchcock et al. 2014; Varndell, Hodge & Fry 2019). Continuing professional development and ongoing support is required to effectively support ED nurse competence in triage processes (Holloway, Arcus & Orsborn 2018; Hitchcock et al. 2014). Educators should regularly conduct analyses of training needs to ensure that the training being provided aligns with staff needs (Gould et al. 2004). The appropriate training of nursing staff has been shown to improve service delivery and patient care (Smith & Topping 2001).

Triage plays a vital role in our health care system, as it enables undifferentiated patients, within a dynamic environment, to be managed in a timely manner based on clinical urgency (Hodge et al. 2013). As triage requires complex decisions in time-critical environments, triage should be undertaken by experienced nurses who have been specifically trained to perform this role (Ministry of Health NSW 2013). McCallum Pardey (2007) explored the varying roles and skills of triage nurses, including critical thinking and decision-making, conducting rapid clinical assessments, assessing urgency and severity in unpredictable situations while ensuring positive patient outcomes and providing a high standard of care.

Registered Nurses who perform emergency triage require specific educational training that is delivered as part of the standardised national training course endorsed by the College of Emergency Nurses Australasia (CENA 2009). The Emergency Triage Education Kit (ETEK) is a resource for nurse educators that seeks to provide overall triage education for ED nurses with an emphasis on triage consistency when using the Australasian Triage Scale (ATS) (CENA 2009; Department of Health 2009). The ATS is a five-tier validated and reliable triage tool that recommends maximum ED waiting times and is used throughout Australian EDs and endorsed by the Australasian College of Emergency Medicine (ACEM 2013) and the CENA (2012). Such training may be provided by clinical nurse educators (ACEM 2012; Northern NSW Local Health District 2015).

Continuing professional development and ongoing support is required to effectively support the competence of ED triage staff (Holloway, Arcus & Orsborn 2018). Varndell, Hodge and Fry (2019) highlighted how variability in triage education may contribute to poor patient outcomes and emphasised the need for the ongoing revision of ED triage nurse education. To date, very few studies have sought to describe the educational needs of triage nurses. The present study aimed to identify the type of educational support nurses feel they need to manage the triage process.

Methods

Study design

A cross-sectional study used a validated questionnaire to identify the educational support nurses feel they need to manage the triage process.

Setting

ED triage nurses currently employed at a NSW regional referral hospital, at which approximately 50,000 patients per year currently present to the ED, were invited to participate in the study. The hospital is a Level 5 hospital with a current bed capacity of 247. At the time of the study, 90 registered nurses were working in the ED of the hospital. Of these, 60 were performing a triage role.

Advertisements for the study were posted on the ED news board in the tea room and in various other strategic areas, outlining the purpose of the study and providing the name of an individual to contact for further information. Additional information summarising the key objectives of the study was presented at the regular ED nurses' education sessions during the six-week research period by a research officer and the ED Clinical Nurse Educator. Staff were provided with a Participant Information Statement and had the opportunity to complete a questionnaire at the end of the review meetings or at a time convenient to them. A secure box was located in the ED triage area for the return of completed questionnaires. All responses to the questionnaires were anonymous and the participants were advised that completion of the questionnaire was not compulsory. Only triage trained nurses working in the ED were invited to participate in the study. It was anticipated that approximately 50 ED triage nurses would be available to participate in the study.

Ethical considerations

This study received ethics approval from the North Coast NSW Human Ethics Committee (Reference No. 2018/ETH00169-11/07/2018).

Measurement Tool

An adapted version of the Hennessy-Hicks Assessment of Training Needs Questionnaire (see Table 1) (Hicks et al. 1996), a psychometrically validated and reliable tool, was used to identify the educational support nurses feel they need to manage the triage process.

Table 1. Adapted Hennessy-Hicks assessment of the training needs questionnaire (Hicks et al. 1996).

Standard Questionnaire

Adaption Questionnaire

1.

Establishing a relationship with patients

Establishing a relationship with patients

2.

Completing paperwork and/or inputting routine data

Completing paperwork and/or inputting routine data

3.

Appraising your own performance

Appraising your own triage performance

4.

Getting along with your colleagues

Getting along with your colleagues

5.

Communicating with patients face to face

Communicating with patients face to face

6.

Treating patients

Triaging patients using rapid assessment

7.

Introducing new ideas at work

Introducing new ideas at triage to increase efficiency

8.

Accessing relevant literature for your clinical work

Accessing relevant literature for your clinical work

9.

Providing feedback to colleagues

Providing feedback to colleagues about triage decisions

10.

Providing information to patients and/or carers

Providing information to patients and/or carers

11.

Showing colleagues and/or students how to do things

Showing colleagues and/or students how to triage

12.

Planning and organising an individual patient's care

Prioritising patient care according to the ATS

13.

Evaluating patients' psychological and social needs

Evaluating patients' psychological and social needs

14.

Organising your own time effectively

Organising your own time effectively

15.

Using technical equipment, including computers

Using technical equipment, including computers

16.

Undertaking health promotion studies

Understanding, and the escalation of, current public health priorities (e.g., influenza and gastroenteritis)

17.

Making do with limited resources

Making do with limited resources

18.

Assessing patients' clinical needs

Assessing patients' clinical needs who present to the ED requiring rapid triage assessment and streaming patients to an Early Treatment Zone

19.

Working as a member of a team

Working as a member of a team

20.

Undertaking administrative activities

Undertaking logistical triage activities, such as patient flow through the ED and the use of the Early Treatment Zone

21.

Personally coping with changes in the health service

Personally coping with changes to the triage process in the health service

The questionnaire has previously been used to identify the training needs of health professionals, including nurses, to support the development of appropriate education programs, current practices and models of care (Carlisle, Bhanugopan & Fish 2011; Hicks & Hennessy 2011; Holloway et al. 2018). The questionnaire comprised five categories: research/audit, communication/teamwork, clinical tasks, administration and management/supervisory tasks. Participants were asked to use a 7-point Likert scale to rate the categories according to their importance in relation to their role (an assessment of occupation profile [Rating A]) and how well the task was currently being performed (an assessment of current skill level [Rating B]). When compared, the two ratings provided a measure of the skill deficit, such that the more important a task is rated and the more poorly it is performed, the greater the need for training.

Training needs were measured as the difference between activity importance and performance scores using a modified version of the valid and reliable Hennessey-Hicks Training Needs Questionnaire (Hennessy & Hicks 2011; Hicks et al. 1996). This instrument is considered psychometrically robust to modifications of up to 25% of the tool (Hennessy & Hicks 2011). The original tool comprised 30 items of which eight can be replaced or amended to customise the instrument for a specific purpose without compromising its validity and reliability (Hennessy & Hicks 2011). Nine items of the original 30-item instrument that referred to conducting and applying research in the work role were deleted (i.e., items 3, 6, 7, 9,17, 21, 25, 26 and 28, which related to the research/audit sub-section; see Hennessy & Hicks 2011, pp. 12-13). Minor changes in wording were made to seven items (i.e., Items 3, 6, 7, 9, 11, 18 and 21) in the questionnaire to improve their applicability to the role of triage nurses. As Table 1 shows, permission from the authors was granted to use the tool with the omission of the research category (nine items).

The following three items were modified more significantly:

Following the amendments to the questionnaire, the final four categories remained: Communication/Teamwork (Items 1, 4, 5, 9, 10 and 19); Clinical Tasks (Items 6, 8, 12, 13, 16 and 18); and Administration (Items 2, 15 and 20); Management/Supervisory Tasks (Items 3, 7, 11, 14, 17 and 21). An open-response field following the questions was added to allow participants to specify any areas in their job for which they would like to receive further training or instruction. These amendments were overseen by a group of senior ED nurses with education expertise and discussed until a consensus was reached. The nurses in this group were excluded from participating in the study. The adapted Hennessey-Hicks questionnaire was piloted with a small group of senior nurses. No changes were required. The questionnaire took approximately 15 minutes to complete.

Analysis

Quantitative data analyses were conducted in IBM SPSS version 24 (IBM Corp 2016) by an independent researcher. The distributions of individual items and the category summary scores were calculated. Training needs were determined by the difference in ratings between participants' perceptions of the importance of a work performance task and participants' self-appraisals of their current performance of this task; larger positive differences indicated greater training needs. Similar to Holloway, Arcus and Orsborn(2018), to gain further insight into participants' training needs, responses to the open-response section were clustered into themes using the categories from the Hennessey-Hicks questionnaire (Hennessey & Hicks 2011). Two researchers independently reviewed the qualitative data to identify recurring themes according to the questionnaire categories and then consolidated ideas until a consensus was reached.

Results

Of the 50 ED triage nurses who were eligible, available and invited to participate in the study, 27 submitted completed questionnaires. This represents a response rate of 54%. Table 2 summarises the participants' characteristics. On average, participants had 11.33 years of experience in their current role (SD = 7.27, range 1-30 years), 15.43 in emergency (SD = 9.80, range 3.5-48 years) 13.44 in triage (SD = 9.16, range 1-40 years).

Table 2. Participant characteristics.

Participant Characteristics

Mean (SD), Range years

Number (%)

Average number of years in current position (n = 26)

11.33 (7.27),1-30

Years of experience in current role (n = 26)

Less than five

7 (26.9)

Five to 10

7 (26.9)

More than 10

12 (46.2)

Average number of years of experience in emergency (n = 27)

15.43 (9.8),3.5-48

Years of experience in emergency (n = 27)

Less than five

4 (14.8)

Five to 10

7 (25.9)

More than 10

16 (59.3)

Average number of years of triage experience (n = 26)

13.44 (9.16),1-40

Years of experience in triage (n = 26)

Less than five

6 (23.1)

Five to 10

6 (23.1)

More than 10

14 (53.8)

Triage nurses' analysis of training needs

Table 3 sets out triage nurses' training needs. The training needs are ranked in order from highest to lowest. The mean training need identified was the difference between importance and performance (each scored from 1 to 7) and thus had a possible range of -6 to +6. A larger positive score indicated a greater training need. The three top training needs identified by the nurses were:

Table 3 presents the importance of training needs as rated by the triage nurses. Activities were ranked broadly by participants with average scores ranging between -0.44 (completing paperwork and/or inputting routine data) and 1.00 (introducing new ideas at triage to increase efficiency).

Table 3. The training needs of triage nurse (ranked from highest to lowest) (n = 27).

Item no.

Triage nurse work tasks

Mean
Training need* (SD)

Mean Importance rating (SD)

Mean Performance rating (SD)

7

Introducing new ideas at triage to increase efficiency

1.00 (1.64)

5.93 (1.07)

4.93 (1.73)

16

Understanding, and the escalation of, current public health priorities (e.g., influenza and gastroenteritis)

0.96 (1.16)

6.30 (0.76)

5.33 (1.39)

8

Accessing relevant literature for your clinical work

0.63 (0.97)

5.85 (1.01)

5.19 (1.13)

9

Providing feedback to colleagues about triage decisions

0.56 (1.45)

5.67 (1.27)

5.11 (1.55)

14

Organising your own time effectively

0.52 (0.80)

6.63 (0.63)

6.11 (0.85)

11

Showing colleagues and/or students how to triage

0.37 (1.78)

5.78 (1.63)

5.41 (1.60)

18

Assessing patients' clinical needs who present to the ED requiring rapid triage assessment and streaming patients to appropriate treatment areas

0.33 (0.55)

6.63 (0.88)

6.30 (0.95)

20

Undertaking logistical triage activities, such as patient flow through the ED and the use of the Early Treatment Zone

0.33 (0.92)

6.64 (0.64)

6.28 (0.79)

19

Working as a member of a team

0.26 (0.66)

6.63 (0.88)

6.37 (0.79)

5

Communicating with patients face to face

0.22 (0.70)

6.74 (0.66)

6.52 (0.80)

6

Triaging patients using rapid assessment

0.22 (0.64)

6.30 (0.76)

6.07 (1.04)

13

Evaluating patients' psychological and social needs

0.22 (0.97)

5.59 (1.25)

5.37 (1.50)

15

Using technical equipment, including computers

0.22 (1.25)

6.12 (1.11)

5.88 (1.02)

12

Prioritising patient care according to the ATS

0.19 (0.56)

6.81 (0.56)

6.63 (0.69)

21

Personally coping with changes to the triage process in the health service

0.19 (1.00)

6.21 (1.06)

6.00 (0.83)

10

Providing information to patients and/or carers

0.15 (1.10)

6.11 (1.05)

5.96 (1.13)

3#

Appraising your own triage performance#

0.04 (1.40)

5.96 (1.19)

5.88 (1.11)

17

Making do with limited resources

-0.04 (1.29)

5.59 (1.74)

5.63 (1.39)

4

Getting along with your colleagues

-0.15 (1.23)

5.89 (1.25)

6.04 (1.13)

1

Establishing a relationship with patients

-0.30 (1.46)

5.48 (1.48)

5.78 (1.09)

2

Completing paperwork and/or inputting routine data

-0.44 (1.34)

5.30 (1.35)

5.74 (1.02)

Note . *'Training need' was calculated by subtracting the 'mean rating of a current performance in a task' from the 'mean importance rating of a task'. Ratings for importance and performance ranged from 1 (not well) to 7 (very well). #Task 3 had n = 26 participants

Table 3 also shows the importance of work performance tasks as rated by triage nurses. All of the activities were ranked as strongly important by participants with average scores ranging between 5.30 (completing paperwork work and/or inputting routine data) and 6.81 (prioritising patient care according to the ATS).

Table 3 also presents the level of performance of the skilled tasks as rated by triage nurses. The level of performance for all activities were ranked highly; however, the range was broad; average scores ranged from 4.93 (introducing new ideas at triage to increase efficiency) to 6.63 (prioritising patient care according to the ATS).

Overall training needs based on questionnaire categories

The most important overall training need fell in the category of Clinical Tasks (Items 16, 8 and 18), followed by Management/Supervisory Tasks (Items 7, 14 and 11), Communication/Teamwork (Items 19, 5 and 10) and Administration (Item 20) (see Table 4).

Table 4. Training needs based on categories.

Domain

Mean overall training needed

Clinical Tasks

0.43

Management/Supervisory Tasks

0.35

Communication/Teamwork

0.12

Administration

0.04

Open-ended responses

An open-response field following the questions allowed participants to specify any areas of their job for which they would like to receive further training or instruction. Open-ended responses (n = 53) were received from 18 participants. The responses were clustered into themes using the categories from the Hennessey-Hicks questionnaire (see Figure 1). The largest area of training needs fell in the clinical task category (25 or 47%). Of these, the largest response related to vital signs (11 or 44%). Other themes included consistency of triaging according to the ATS (4 or 16%), physical assessments, such as fracture care, eye and stroke assessments (3 or 12%), rapid triage assessment processes (2 or 8%),ED models of care (2 or 8%) and other (3 or 12%).

Figure 1. Training needs based on Hennessy-Hicks's categories: Responses to open-ended questions.

Discussion

The Hennessey-Hicks Training Needs Analysis Questionnaire was adapted for this study (Hennessey & Hicks 2011). A training needs gap was identified by calculating the difference in mean rating scores between the importance of a work performance task and participant nurses' self-appraisal of their current performance of that task. The findings of this study showed that triage nurses ranked the importance and performance of all tasks highly. The top three larger positive differences indicated that to manage the triage process, nurses were of the view that they required educational support in relation to introducing new ideas to increase efficiency, current public health priorities and accessing the relevant literature. Similar to Holloway et al. (2018), the clinical tasks category was identified by triage nurses as a priority area for which there was an overall training need. Notably, the triages nurses identified training in vital signs and physical assessment as priority areas.

Efficient triage processes are critical to provide safe and best quality care to patients accessing EDs (Burgess et al. 2019; Hitchcock et al. 2014). Recently, the ACEM (2016) stated that triage should be an assessment of the presenting problem and general appearance, including physiological observations whereby vital signs may be required to estimate urgency if time permits (Burgess et al. 2019). Part of the revised process includes limiting the responsibilities and tasks of triage nurses and focusing on a brief clinical assessment to ensure urgency and timely clinical care (MoH 2013; ACEM 2016). This change aligns with the literature that discusses limiting the traditional responsibilities of triage nurses, such as assessing vital signs, to avoid queuing and delays at triage (ACEM 2016; MoH 2013; Burgess et al. 2019). These recent changes to the ACEM's (2016) position on triage may explain why nurses were of the view that they needed training in the areas of introducing new ideas to increase efficiency and clinical tasks with a strong emphasis on vital signs. Further education to support ED nurses to triage efficiently using brief clinical assessments may be required.

As evidenced by Holloway et al. (2018), the participants in this study indicated that they required training in relation to understanding, and the escalation of, current public health priorities and accessing relevant literature to manage the triage process. Holloway et al (2018) suggested that primary health care and health promotion reflects a gap in confidence in the provision of evidenced-based care. Triage education largely supports complex technical skills and accuracy to determine the primary issue requiring immediate treatment (Innes, Plummer & Considine 2011). Recent variations to triage nursing roles places an emphasis on both the theoretical and practical aspects of nursing to cope with the demands of the role (Sanders & Minick 2014). Education in health promotion and the development of skills to access the relevant literature will support the complexity of the nurses' role and increase their confidence and competence in their ability to manage the triage process.

Limitations

As this study was restricted to a single site and comprised only a small sample size of triage nurses, the generalisability of the results may be limited.

Conclusion

Triage nurses have an autonomous role that requires complex critical thinking in the context of emergency care, patient safety and outcomes (CENA 2012; McCallum Pardey 2007; Varndell et al. 2019). Triage nurses receive education as part of the standardised national training course; however, the nurses in this study indicated a need for further training and support (Department of Health 2009). The results of this study will inform the design of future education programs and the development of the capability of the nursing workforce to triage efficiently and effectively.

Acknowledgements

The authors would like to acknowledge:

Conflict of Interest

The authors declare no conflict of interest.

Funding

This project was funded by HETI's Rural Research Capacity Building Program.

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