Triage

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Jon Haws
BS, BSN,RN,CCRN Alumnus
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Outline

Overview

  1. Triage
    1. What is triage?
    2. Situations for triage

Nursing Points

 

General

  1. What is triage?
    1. Categorization system that establishes severity
    2. Method of Prioritization
  2. ESI Emergency Triage Algorithm
    1. ESI is the algorithm used by emergency rooms to triage
      1. Does the situation require a life-saving, immediate intervention?
      2. Is the situation high risk? Is the patient lethargic or confused? Is the patient in severe distress or pain?
      3. Is the patient’s vital signs in a dangerous range?
      4. How many additional resources are needed?
        1. If 1 or more additional resources are needed, it changes the algorithm.
    2. See the link attached to this lesson for more information
  3. Situations
    1. Emergency Department
      1. Emergent
        1. Needs immediate treatment
        2. Right now
        3. Ex: Trauma, Stroke, MI, Head injuries
      2. Urgent
        1. Needs to be seen in 1-2 hours
        2. Ex: Fever, HTN, Fractures
      3. Non Urgent
        1. Can wait
        2. Stable Patients
        3. Ex: Sprains, minor injuries, cold/virus
    2. Disasters
      1. Survivable Injuries
        1. Immediate threat of death
        2. Stable Patients
      2. Non Survivable Injuries
        1. Dead on arrival or actively dying with non-survivable injuries

Nursing Concepts

  1. Prioritization
  2. Clinical Judgment

Patient Education

  1. Educate patients who are in the ER waiting room  with stable illnesses or minor injuries that there are other patients that have life-threatening emergencies
    1. Be compassionate
    2. Be patient

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Transcript

All right. We’re gonna talk about Triage. Now this stuff is pretty cool. I really enjoy trauma and triage, and stuff like that, so we’re gonna talk about this and let you know what you need to know to understand how things are working in a hospital, but we’re gonna go pretty high level with this. There’s some associated links and stuff in here that you can use to help you understand it a little bit better.

But, what is triage? Triage really is nothing more than just a categorization system. It establishes the severity of an illness or injury. It’s really used in an emergency or disaster situations to determine which patients have injury, illness, and what degree of injury or illness they have and how we should then treat that. Now it’s really a method of prioritization for these types of situations.

Now let’s talk now about ESI, or the Emergency Severity Index. This is really an algorithm used by emergency rooms to triage patients. This is really used in day to day life inside the emergency room triage. What it does is it really helps us answer which patients needs to be addressed faster. Does the situation require a life saving immediate intervention? Is the situation a high risk situation? Is the patient lethargic or confused, or is the patient in severe pain or distress? Does the patient have vital signs that are in dangerous zones, so are they massively elevated or massively low, or are the patients signs just up a little bit, down a little bit, or are they normal?

And then how many resources are needed for the patient? The interesting thing here is the higher number equals better for this patient. Okay. If one or more resources are needed it starts to change the algorithm. Now there’s a link in this lesson that shows you how the ESI is calculated, so I’d encourage you to go check that out. Don’t spend too much time with it, but just know that, that’s there. It’s something that’s used to gauge the severity of different patients.

In the Emergency Department they might also say the patient has an emergent need, an urgent need, or non-urgent need. If a patient has an emergent need they need treatment right now. We can’t wait. We must take care of them now. They need immediate treatment. This would be things like trauma, stroke, MI, head injuries. For many of these injuries there’s specific time frames that certain things must be done, okay. For MI and for stroke there’s certain time frames where we must get CT, we must get a needle, we must get medications done within a certain time frame.

Then we have urgent needs. These are patients that need to be seen within one or two hours. The patient might have a fever that’s climbing. They might have hypertension that’s also climbing. They might have fractures. These are issues or situations that we need to address, but we have some time with this. It’s not completely emergent, it’s urgent.

Then we have non-urgent situations. These are stable patients, or patients with minor injuries. Your patient might have a sprain. They might have a minor injury. They might have a cold, or a virus. They’re not comfortable. They have something going on, but we don’t have to address something right now. We have more than a couple hours to deal with it.

Now in disaster situations patients are separated by the survivability of their injury. So, if the patient has a survivable injury we say that they’re in … but they’re in an immediate threat of death, they get this color code of red. It’s an emergent patient. It’s something we must deal with right now. They’re in immediate threat of death. We call them a Code Red. Now if the patient is stable but urgent, something that must be dealt with very soon, they’re a Code Yellow. If the patient is stable then they’re a Code Green. Now in disaster situations they use something a little bit different. They use this color coding system to help identify patients and what their needs are in these situations, so they’re really separated by survivability, whether the patient’s injuries are survivable or non-survivable.

Survivable injuries are separated out by either immediate threat of death, or stable. If the patient is in immediate threat of death then they have emergent needs, something we must deal with absolutely right now. They get a Code Red. If the patient is stable, but they have urgent needs they’re a Code Yellow. If the patient is stable and has no injuries going on, but they’re there and they might have minor needs then that patient is a Code Green.

Then we have our non-survivable injuries. The first one would be dead on arrival. We can’t do anything for this patient. This patient has passed. There’s nothing we can really do. Then you have your actively dying patients. These patients are going to die if nothing is done. Now, we still make all efforts that we can to make these patients comfortable via comfort care, things like morphine. We try to make these patients comfortable, but they are actively dying. Then we have our currently alive patients with non-survivable injuries. These patients are Code Black. Okay. We can’t really do anything for these patients. They’re either dead on arrival, actively dying, or currently alive with non-survivable injuries.

All right guys, so what are the nursing concepts you need to be aware with this? First, we would be prioritization. It’s so important that we understand how patients are triaged both in the emergency room, or in disaster situations. That’s the first nursing concept you would look at. Then clinical judgment. Our job as nurses is to understand what needs to be done now, what needs to be done soon, and what could be held off. These triaging strategies are used to help you know what patients must be seen now and which ones can be held off.
Let’s talk about some of the key points that we just covered here. First would be prioritization. Triage is really a method for categorizing the severity of injuries and focusing on the patients that need to be prioritized first versus later. It’s very situational. It’s used in Emergency Departments as well as in disaster situations. They have different ways of doing that in emergency rooms like the ESI, and then in disaster situations with the color coding. And then it’s done by severity. It’s either emergent, urgent, non-urgent. This is in emergency rooms and they use the ESI as well. And then in disaster settings it’s really done by the survivability of the injury, whether it’s survivable, non-survivable. They assign color codes to these patients.

All right, guys. That’s a quick overview of Triaging. That should help you understand what happens in a hospital, what happens in a disasters, a quick overview of that. Make sure you check out all the links and the different resources with this lesson to help you understand a little bit more. Now go out and be your best selves today. Happy Nursing.

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4th Semester

Concepts Covered:

  • Renal Disorders
  • Endocrine and Metabolic Disorders
  • Urinary System
  • Shock
  • Musculoskeletal Trauma
  • Postoperative Nursing
  • Preoperative Nursing
  • Cardiac Disorders
  • Renal and Urinary Disorders
  • Cardiovascular Disorders
  • Circulatory System
  • Respiratory System
  • Digestive System
  • Integumentary Disorders
  • Nervous System
  • Pregnancy Risks
  • Neurological Trauma
  • Neurologic and Cognitive Disorders
  • Emergency Care of the Neurological Patient
  • Neurological Emergencies
  • Respiratory Disorders
  • Substance Abuse Disorders
  • Central Nervous System Disorders – Brain
  • Basics of Sociology
  • Statistics
  • Urinary Disorders
  • Fundamentals of Emergency Nursing
  • Prioritization
  • Test Taking Strategies
  • Delegation
  • Documentation and Communication
  • Legal and Ethical Issues
  • Community Health Overview
  • Communication
  • Eating Disorders
  • Noninfectious Respiratory Disorder
  • Integumentary Disorders
  • Disorders of Pancreas
  • Upper GI Disorders
  • Acute & Chronic Renal Disorders
  • Liver & Gallbladder Disorders
  • Respiratory Emergencies
  • Emergency Care of the Cardiac Patient
  • Disorders of the Posterior Pituitary Gland

Study Plan Lessons

Fluid Volume Overload
Fluid Volume Deficit
Nursing Care and Pathophysiology for Sepsis
Nursing Care and Pathophysiology for SIRS & MODS
Nursing Care and Pathophysiology for Compartment Syndrome
Nursing Care and Pathophysiology for Rhabdomyolysis
Discharge (DC) Teaching After Surgery
Informed Consent
Performing Cardiac (Heart) Monitoring
Nephrotic Syndrome
Congenital Heart Defects (CHD)
EKG (ECG) Waveforms
The EKG (ECG) Graph
Electrical A&P of the Heart
Electrolytes Involved in Cardiac (Heart) Conduction
Breathing Movements
Breathing Control
Respiratory Functions of Blood
Liver & Gallbladder
Respiratory Structure & Function
Burn Injuries
Spinal Cord
Electrical Activity in the Heart
Cardiac (Heart) Physiology
Nutrition (Diet) in Disease
Blood Cultures
Drawing Blood
Spinal Precautions & Log Rolling
Neuro Assessment
Ischemic (CVA) Stroke Labs
Renal (Kidney) Failure Labs
Sepsis Labs
Dysrhythmias Labs
Anion Gap
Glucose Lab Values
Urinalysis (UA)
Glomerular Filtration Rate (GFR)
Creatinine (Cr) Lab Values
Blood Urea Nitrogen (BUN) Lab Values
Liver Function Tests
Total Bilirubin (T. Billi) Lab Values
Albumin Lab Values
Cultures
White Blood Cell (WBC) Lab Values
Hematocrit (Hct) Lab Values
Hemoglobin (Hbg) Lab Values
Red Blood Cell (RBC) Lab Values
Lab Panels
Urinary Elimination
Shock
Triage
Prioritization
Delegation
Documentation Pro Tips
Admissions, Discharges, and Transfers
Legal Considerations
Levels of Prevention
Nursing Care Delivery Models
Advance Directives
What Guides Nurses Practice
Fluid Compartments
Fluid Shifts (Ascites) (Pleural Effusion)
Phosphorus-Phos
ABGs Nursing Normal Lab Values
ABG (Arterial Blood Gas) Interpretation-The Basics
ROME – ABG (Arterial Blood Gas) Interpretation
Respiratory Acidosis (interpretation and nursing interventions)
Respiratory Alkalosis
Metabolic Acidosis (interpretation and nursing diagnosis)
Metabolic Alkalosis
Lactic Acid
Base Excess & Deficit
Burn Injuries
Nursing Care and Pathophysiology of Diabetic Ketoacidosis (DKA)
Nursing Care and Pathophysiology for Pancreatitis
Nursing Care and Pathophysiology of Acute Kidney (Renal) Injury (AKI)
Chronic Renal (Kidney) Module Intro
Nursing Care and Pathophysiology of Chronic Kidney (Renal) Disease (CKD)
Nursing Care and Pathophysiology for Cholecystitis
Nursing Care and Pathophysiology for Hepatitis (Liver Disease)
Nursing Care and Pathophysiology for Cirrhosis (Liver Disease, Hepatic encephalopathy, Portal Hypertension, Esophageal Varices)
Restrictive Lung Diseases (Pulmonary Fibrosis, Neuromuscular Disorders)
Nursing Care and Pathophysiology of Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome (ARDS)
Blunt Chest Trauma
Nursing Care and Pathophysiology for Pneumothorax & Hemothorax
Brain Death v. Comatose
Nursing Care and Pathophysiology for Parkinsons
Nursing Care and Pathophysiology for Hemorrhagic Stroke (CVA)
Nursing Care and Pathophysiology for Ischemic Stroke (CVA)
Stroke Assessment (CVA)
Stroke Therapeutic Management (CVA)
Stroke Nursing Care (CVA)
Seizures Module Intro
Spinal Cord Injury
Preload and Afterload
Nursing Care and Pathophysiology of Angina
Heart (Cardiac) Failure Module Intro
Nursing Care and Pathophysiology for Heart Failure (CHF)
Nursing Care and Pathophysiology for Hypovolemic Shock
Nursing Care and Pathophysiology for Cardiogenic Shock
Nursing Care and Pathophysiology for Distributive Shock
Normal Sinus Rhythm
Sinus Bradycardia
Sinus Tachycardia
Atrial Flutter
Atrial Fibrillation (A Fib)
Premature Atrial Contraction (PAC)
Supraventricular Tachycardia (SVT)
Premature Ventricular Contraction (PVC)
Ventricular Tachycardia (V-tach)
Ventricular Fibrillation (V Fib)
1st Degree AV Heart Block
2nd Degree AV Heart Block Type 1 (Mobitz I, Wenckebach)
2nd Degree AV Heart Block Type 2 (Mobitz II)
3rd Degree AV Heart Block (Complete Heart Block)
Legal Aspects of Documentation
Dehydration
Cerebral Palsy (CP)
Spina Bifida – Neural Tube Defect (NTD)
Vasopressin
Diuretics (Loop, Potassium Sparing, Thiazide, Furosemide/Lasix)