%0 Journal Article %T Emergency Department Triage Scales and Their Components: A Systematic Review of the Scientific Evidence %A Nasim Farrohknia %A Maaret Castr¨¦n %A Anna Ehrenberg %A Lars Lind %A Sven Oredsson %A H£¿kan Jonsson %A Kjell Asplund %A Katarina E G£¿ransson %J Scandinavian Journal of Trauma, Resuscitation and Emergency Medicine %D 2011 %I BioMed Central %R 10.1186/1757-7241-19-42 %X 1. Does assessment of individual vital signs or chief complaints affect mortality during the hospital stay or within 30 days after arrival at the ED?2. What is the level of agreement between clinicians' triage decisions compared to each other or to a gold standard for each scale (reliability)?3. How valid is each triage scale in predicting hospitalization and hospital mortality?A systematic search of the international literature published from 1966 through March 31, 2009 explored the British Nursing Index, Business Source Premier, CINAHL, Cochrane Library, EMBASE, and PubMed. Inclusion was limited to controlled studies of adult patients (¡Ư15 years) visiting EDs for somatic reasons. Outcome variables were death in ED or hospital and need for hospitalization (validity). Methodological quality and clinical relevance of each study were rated as high, medium, or low. The results from the studies that met the inclusion criteria and quality standards were synthesized applying the internationally developed GRADE system. Each conclusion was then assessed as having strong, moderately strong, limited, or insufficient scientific evidence. If studies were not available, this was also noted.We found ED triage scales to be supported, at best, by limited and often insufficient evidence.The ability of the individual vital signs included in the different scales to predict outcome is seldom, if at all, studied in the ED setting. The scientific evidence to assess interrater agreement (reliability) was limited for one triage scale and insufficient or lacking for all other scales. Two of the scales yielded limited scientific evidence, and one scale yielded insufficient evidence, on which to assess the risk of early death or hospitalization in patients assigned to the two lowest triage levels on a 5-level scale (validity).Triage is a central task in an emergency department (ED). In this context, triage is viewed as the rating of patients' clinical urgency [1]. Rating is necessary to ident %U http://www.sjtrem.com/content/19/1/42