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. 1989 Mar;15(3):77-80.
doi: 10.1016/s0097-5990(16)30269-x.

The reliability and validity of the pediatric appropriateness evaluation protocol

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The reliability and validity of the pediatric appropriateness evaluation protocol

K J Kemper et al. QRB Qual Rev Bull. 1989 Mar.

Abstract

Researchers at Yale-New Haven Hospital (New Haven, Connecticut) tested the reliability and validity of the Pediatric Appropriateness Evaluation Protocol (PAEP) through a comparison of inter-rater agreement between experienced pediatricians and less experienced clinicians. The PAEP is a diagnosis-independent instrument with 26 criteria in three categories used to assess appropriate hospital use in pediatrics. Pediatrician raters, using clinical judgment alone, and clinicians (fellows in pediatrics and nurse practitioners), using both clinical judgment and the PAEP, reviewed a sample of 47 days and judged which inpatient days were medically appropriate. A day was judged appropriate if any of the 26 criteria were fulfilled for that day and inappropriate if none of the criteria was fulfilled. The PAEP was found to be a reliable and valid instrument with a 93% sensitivity and a 78% specificity for detecting medically inappropriate days.

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