Study III

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Study III — Infection presentations: dispatch, phenotype, and high-risk triage

Study III examines concordance across system classifications—dispatch reason for call, on-scene phenotype (ESS), and high-risk triage (RETTS)—and
uses interpretable exploratory modelling to characterise heterogeneity in routinely captured data.

Core interpretation principle

Because ESS contributes to RETTS, the study quantifies concordance/alignment across stages rather than independent predictive validity.

Key results (study-level)

  • On-scene infection-coded ESS labels were present in ~64% of “Fever/Infection” calls, indicating moderate EMCC–ESS concordance.
  • A gradient-boosting model discriminated high-risk triage (RETTS Red/Orange) with moderate accuracy (AUC reported in the manuscript).
  • Most predictive signals included on-scene ESS code keywords, the response-time interval, and patient age; PD showed a threshold rise in risk beyond ~60 years and non-linear contextual patterns.
  • The apparent decline in predicted high-risk probability with longer response times is interpreted as consistent with preferential early response to the most critical cases (selection/priority effects), not as evidence that delay is beneficial.

Status / availability

Manuscript. Public link will be added when shareable.

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