Home
Scholarly Works
The inter-rater reliability of the Risk Instrument...
Journal article

The inter-rater reliability of the Risk Instrument for Screening in the Community

Abstract

Predicting risk of adverse healthcare outcomes is important to enable targeted delivery of interventions. The Risk Instrument for Screening in the Community (RISC), designed for use by public health nurses (PHNs), measures the 1-year risk of hospitalisation, institutionalisation and death in community-dwelling older adults according to a five-point global risk score: from low (score 1,2) to medium (3) to high (4,5). We examined the inter-rater reliability (IRR) of the RISC between student PHNs (n=32) and expert raters using six cases (two low, medium and high-risk), scored before and after RISC training. Correlations increased for each adverse outcome, statistically significantly for institutionalisation (r=0.72 to 0.80, p=0.04) and hospitalisation (r=0.51 to 0.71, p<0.01) but not death. Training improved accuracy for low-risk but not all high-risk cases. Overall, the RISC showed good IRR, which increased after RISC training. That reliability fell for some high-risk cases suggests that the training programme requires adjustment to improve IRR further.

Authors

Weathers E; O'Caoimh R; O'Sullivan R; Paúl C; Orfilia F; Clarnette R; Fitzgerald C; Svendrovski A; Cornally N; Leahy-Warren P

Journal

British Journal of Community Nursing, Vol. 21, No. 9, pp. 469–475

Publisher

Mark Allen Group

Publication Date

September 2, 2016

DOI

10.12968/bjcn.2016.21.9.469

ISSN

1462-4753
View published work (Non-McMaster Users)

Contact the Experts team