Telephone triage. 2000

F A Preston
North Shore Cancer Center, Peabody, MA, USA.

Nurses frequently provide advice and education over the phone. Telephone triage is an area of potential litigation for the nurse. Information must be clear, concise, and accurate. The nurse needs to ascertain that the patient understands the instructions provided and feels free to ask questions and receive clarification of any information that is confusing. Documentation needs to describe the nursing process of data collection, planning, intervention, and evaluation. In this way, patients will receive quality information that allows them to manage symptoms at home, understand when medical interventions are necessary, and avoid unnecessary delays in care. Telephone triage is an integral part of oncology care that covers a broad range of activities, including symptom management, medication renewal, coordination of care, education, and psychosocial support. As telephone triage becomes more "high risk, high volume," nurses must review the triage process used in their clinical settings. Areas to discuss and delineate include differentiation between medical, nursing, and secretarial responsibilities; technical support systems and access; documentation guidelines; telephone triage protocols; staff education; and patient satisfaction (Nauright, Moneyham, & Williamson, 1999).

UI MeSH Term Description Entries
D009730 Nursing Assessment Evaluation of the nature and extent of nursing problems presented by a patient for the purpose of patient care planning. Nursing Protocols,Assessment, Nursing,Protocols, Nursing,Assessments, Nursing,Nursing Assessments,Nursing Protocol,Protocol, Nursing
D006801 Humans Members of the species Homo sapiens. Homo sapiens,Man (Taxonomy),Human,Man, Modern,Modern Man
D013689 Telephone An instrument for reproducing sounds especially articulate speech at a distance. (Webster, 3rd ed) Switchboard Service,Service, Switchboard,Services, Switchboard,Switchboard Services,Telephones
D014218 Triage The sorting out and classification of patients or casualties to determine priority of need and proper place of treatment. Triages

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