Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1076274 International Journal of Nursing Studies 2014 6 Pages PDF
Abstract

BackgroundOne of the extensions to practice for the emergency nurse practitioner role is to appropriately order and interpret radiographs in the emergency department.ObjectiveThe aim of the study was to compare the accuracy in interpreting isolated adult limb radiographs between emergency nurse practitioners and emergency physicians.DesignA prospective comparative study was undertaken.SettingEmergency department in a large metropolitan hospital.Participants200 adult patients with isolated limb injuries were consented.MethodsSix emergency nurse practitioners and ten emergency physicians participated. One emergency physician and emergency nurse practitioner independently clinically assessed each patient, determined the need for radiograph and separately recorded their interpretation of the radiograph as either definite fracture, no fracture or possible fracture. A single consultant radiologist reviewed each radiograph and their interpretation was seen as the gold standard. The sensitivity and specificity of emergency physicians and emergency nurse practitioners were calculated. To measure the level of agreement between the two-clinician groups, the weighted Kappa statistic was used.ResultsThe sensitivity for the emergency nurse practitioners was 91% and 88% for the emergency physicians. The specificity for the emergency nurse practitioners was 85% and for the emergency physicians 91%. The weighted Kappa on the presence of a fracture between the emergency nurse practitioners and emergency physicians was 0.83.ConclusionsThis study validates the clinical and diagnostic skills of emergency nurse practitioners assessed in the interpretation of isolated adult limb injury radiographs.

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