Emergency department use of an electronic differential diagnosis generator in the evaluation of critically ill patients.

Document Type

Article

Publication Date

11-18-2023

Publication Title

Internal and emergency medicine

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Accurate diagnosis is an essential component of managing critically ill emergency department (ED) patients. Electronic diagnosis generators (EDGs) are software tools which assist clinicians in their diagnosis generation; however, they have not been evaluated for use for critical ED patients. We aimed to evaluate the use of an EDG for this population to determine its impact on diagnosis generation and diagnostic testing.

METHODS: We performed an observational study on usage of an EDG in the high-acuity area of a tertiary care ED. The EDG was used by residents evaluating each patient in the area. The resident used the EDG when the case was felt to have diagnostic uncertainty and completed a data collection tool. Data were summarized by frequencies. Chi-squared or Fisher's exact tests were used to assess the association of added value of the EDG for diagnosis generation and diagnostic testing.Affiliations: Journal instruction requires a country for affiliations; however, this is missing in all affiliations. Please verify if the provided country is correct and amend if necessary.Country provided is correct RESULTS: Over the 8-month study period, the EDG was utilized to evaluate 98 critical ED patients, of whom 60% were female, 7% were pediatric, and 46% were elderly. It was used most commonly for gastroenterological, infectious disease/immunologic, metabolic/renal, and neuropsychiatric presentations, and was least used for trauma presentations. Use of the EDG led to a diagnosis not initially considered in 47% of cases and led to additional diagnostic testing in 4% of cases.

CONCLUSION: EDGs have some potential to improve diagnosis in critical EM patients by expanding the differential diagnosis and, to a lesser extent, altering diagnostic testing.

DOI

10.1007/s11739-023-03473-8

ISSN

1970-9366

PubMed ID

37980319

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