Triage Systems - Sorting the Chaos
- Goal: "Do the most good for the most people" in Mass Casualty Incidents (MCI) by categorizing casualties based on urgency.
- Common System: START (Simple Triage and Rapid Treatment).
- š“ Red (I): Immediate. Life-threatening but salvageable. E.g., shock, airway threat.
- š” Yellow (II): Delayed. Serious injuries, but can wait. E.g., stable fractures.
- š¢ Green (III): Minor. "Walking wounded."
- ā« Black (IV): Expectant/Deceased. Unlikely to survive.
ā In pediatric triage (JumpSTART), if an apneic child has a pulse, give 5 rescue breaths. If breathing starts, tag as Red. If not, tag as Black.
Scoring Systems - The Numbers Game
- Objective tools for triage & predicting prognosis; guide resource allocation.
- SIRS Criteria: Sensitive but not specific for sepsis.
- qSOFA: Bedside tool to identify patients with suspected infection likely to have poor outcomes. A score of ā„2 is critical.
- SOFA Score: Assesses organ dysfunction in the ICU; more comprehensive than qSOFA.
- NEWS/NEWS2: Broader scores for detecting clinical deterioration.
ā qSOFA (quick SOFA) assesses three criteria: Respiratory Rate (ā„22/min), Altered Mental Status (GCS <15), and Systolic Blood Pressure (ā¤100 mmHg). A score of ā„2 suggests a high risk of poor outcome.
Ethical Frameworks - The Moral Compass
- Core Four (Principlism):
- Beneficence: Act in the patient's best interest.
- Non-maleficence: "First, do no harm" (Primum non nocere).
- Autonomy: Respect patient's right to decide (informed consent).
- Justice: Fair distribution of resources (distributive justice).
- Utilitarianism: Greatest good for the greatest number; guides public health & triage.
- Deontology: Duty-based ethics, focusing on moral rules and duties irrespective of outcomes.
ā In resource-limited settings, the principle of distributive justice often overrides the "Rule of Rescue" (our impulse to save one identifiable life at any cost), shifting focus to maximizing population-level benefit.
Resource Allocation - Dividing Scarcity
- Primary Goal: Maximize benefit for the largest number of people (Utilitarianism).
- Triage: Cornerstone of emergency resource allocation. Prioritizes patients based on severity and survivability.
- Key Systems: START (Simple Triage and Rapid Treatment), SALT (Sort-Assess-Lifesaving Interventions-Treat/Transport).

ā In resource-limited ICU settings, the SOFA (Sequential Organ Failure Assessment) score is often used to predict mortality and guide allocation decisions, prioritizing patients with a higher likelihood of survival.
- In CCS, treat first what kills first; prioritize immediate life-saving interventions over complex diagnostics.
- Systematically follow the ABCDE (Airway, Breathing, Circulation) approach to manage emergencies.
- In mass casualty incidents, employ triage principles to maximize survival for the greatest number.
- Opt for cost-effective, high-impact treatments available within the limited resource setting.
- Continuously re-assess the patient's status, as clinical conditions can change rapidly.
- Base decisions on resource availability-staff, beds, and essential supplies.
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