Triage principles

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Triage Fundamentals - Sorting the Chaos

  • Primary Goal: To do the greatest good for the greatest number of casualties, not to treat the most critically injured first.
  • Core Principle: Sorting based on injury severity, prognosis, and resource availability.
  • Standard Color Codes:
    • Red (T1/Immediate): Critical, life-threatening injuries. Needs immediate care.
    • Yellow (T2/Delayed): Serious, but not immediately life-threatening.
    • Green (T3/Minor): "Walking wounded."
    • Black (T4/Expectant): Deceased or injuries incompatible with life.

⭐ In a mass casualty incident (MCI), a patient with an open fracture and stable vitals is tagged Yellow, whereas a patient with respiratory distress is tagged Red.

START Triage - The 30-2-Can Do Rule

  • A rapid triage system for mass casualty incidents (MCI).
  • Assesses patients based on Respirations, Perfusion, and Mental Status (📌 RPM).
  • The core principle is the "30-2-Can Do" rule.

Exam Favourite: In START triage, if a patient is not breathing, you are only allowed to perform one simple intervention: opening the airway. If they remain apneic after this, they are classified as deceased/expectant (Black tag).

Triage Categories - Code Red, Code Black

  • 🔴 Code Red (I, Emergent):

    • Condition: Life-threatening injuries requiring immediate intervention.
    • Principle: Greatest chance of survival with rapid treatment.
    • Examples: Airway obstruction, shock, major hemorrhage, >30% BSA burns.
  • ⚫ Code Black (0, Expectant/Deceased):

    • Condition: Deceased or injuries so catastrophic that survival is impossible.
    • Principle: Resources are not utilized; provide comfort care if conscious.
    • Examples: Apnea, pulselessness, decapitation, massive cranial destruction.

Reverse Triage: In lightning strikes or hypothermia, victims in apparent cardiorespiratory arrest (often tagged Black) are prioritized first due to the potential for resuscitation with prolonged CPR.

IDME Mnemonic for Primary Triage

Pediatric Triage - JumpSTART Your Engines

Modified START triage for children <8 years or <45 kg. Assesses non-ambulatory patients in a mass casualty incident. Uses the same color codes.

📌 Mnemonic: RPM

  • Respirations
  • Perfusion
  • Mental Status

⭐ The key modification from adult START is giving 5 rescue breaths to an apneic child with a pulse. If breathing starts, they are triaged as RED (Immediate).

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways

  • Triage Goal: Do the greatest good for the greatest number of casualties.
  • This often means not treating the most critical patient first if their prognosis is poor and resources are limited.
  • Red (Immediate): Life-threatening but salvageable injuries (e.g., airway obstruction, shock).
  • Yellow (Delayed): Serious injuries that are not immediately life-threatening (e.g., stable fractures).
  • Green (Minor): The "walking wounded."
  • Black (Expectant): Unsurvivable injuries or found pulseless/apneic.

Practice Questions: Triage principles

Test your understanding with these related questions

A 45-year-old man was a driver in a motor vehicle collision. The patient is not able to offer a medical history during initial presentation. His temperature is 97.6°F (36.4°C), blood pressure is 104/74 mmHg, pulse is 150/min, respirations are 12/min, and oxygen saturation is 98% on room air. On exam, he does not open his eyes, he withdraws to pain, and he makes incomprehensible sounds. He has obvious signs of trauma to the chest and abdomen. His abdomen is distended and markedly tender to palpation. He also has an obvious open deformity of the left femur. What is the best initial step in management?

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