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. 2023 Apr 11;12(5):890–896. doi: 10.21037/tp-22-511

Table 2. Results of multivariate regression analyses of factors affecting children’s self-report of pain in triage.

Variable Pain score ≥1 Pain score ≥4
aOR 95% CI P value aOR 95% CI P value
Older age 1.15 (1.13–1.17) <0.0001 1.15 (1.12–1.16) <0.0001
Patient sex
   Female Reference Reference
   Male 1.05 (0.89–1.24) 0.53 1.1 (0.93–1.31) 0.27
Triage acuity level*
   5 Reference Reference
   3–4 2.01 (1.54–2.62) <0.0001 2.09 (1.73–2.51) <0.0001
   2 2.27 (1.90–2.70) <0.0001 2.15 (1.63–2.84) <0.0001
24-hour time of arrival
   07:01–15:00 Reference Reference
   15:01–23:00 1.12 (0.94–1.34) 0.19 1.02 (0.85–1.20) 0.79
   23:01–07:00 1.06 (0.84–1.35) 0.64 1.14 (0.89–1.46) 0.30
Medical Reference Reference
Trauma 1.97 (1.67–2.31) <0.0001 1.68 (1.41–1.99) <0.0001
Nurse experience
   More than 10 years Reference Reference
   5–10 years 1.03 (0.79–1.35) 0.82 1.07 (0.79–1.43) 0.62
   Less than 5 years 1.12 (0.95–1.26) 0.86 1.14 (0.93–1.34) 0.76
Nurse’s face mask
   Clear Reference Reference
   Surgical 0.68 (0.56–0.82) <0.001 0.71 (0.58–0.86) <0.001

*, based on the PaedCTAS. Level 1—patient requires immediate evaluation and care, level 2—patient requires evaluation and care within 15 min, level 3—patient requires evaluation and care within 30 min, level 4—patient requires evaluation and care within 60 min, and level 5—patient requires evaluation and care within 120 min. Patients who receive triage level 1 were excluded from the study. aOR, adjusted odds ratio; CI, confidence interval; PaedCTAS, Paediatric Canadian Triage Acuity Scale.