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TRIAGE

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Edited and Compiled by LeMay Hupp, MPH, RN Objectives The student will be able to: Discuss the concept of triage Utilize the S.T.A.R.T. and JumpStart methods to ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: TRIAGE


1
TRIAGE
  • START and JumpStart
  • Triage
  • The Basics

Edited and Compiled by LeMay Hupp, MPH, RN
2
Triage
  • Objectives
  • The student will be able to
  • Discuss the concept of triage
  • Utilize the S.T.A.R.T. and JumpStart methods to
    triage victims
  • Explain the international triage color code
    system and how it is utilized

3

TRIAGE
  • Triage means to sort
  • Looks at medical needs and urgency of each
    patient
  • Sorting based on limited data acquisition
  • Must consider resource availability

4
TRIAGE
GOLDEN HOUR
  • Trauma patient has the best chance for recovery
    if ACLS within one hour from the time of the
    injury
  • With multiple victims, the Golden Hour can slip
    away due to limited rescuers and / or resources

5
TRIAGE
KEY PRINCIPLE
  • Doing
  • the
  • Greatest
  • Good,
  • For the Greatest Number

6
Goal of Multicasualty Triage
TRIAGE
  • To do the best for the most
  • using the least.

7
Basic Disaster Life Support
Triage
  • MASS Triage
  • M ove
  • A ssess
  • S ort
  • S end

8
TRIAGE
Disaster Acronyms
  • M.P.I. -- Multi-patient Incident
  • M.C.I. -- Mass Casualty Incident
  • M.O.I. -- Mechanism of Injury
  • M.V.C. -- Motor Vehicle Collision
  • M.V.A. Motor Vehicle Accident

9
TRIAGE

Triage is an effective strategy in situations where There are many more victims than rescuers There are limited resources Time is critical
10
TRIAGE
During triage Victims are evaluated Sorted by the urgency of the treatment needed Placed into immediate and delayed treatment areas
11
Triage
  • SCENE SAFETY Size Up
  • Size up the scene, Make sure the scene is safe
    for you to enter
  • CREATE ORDER
  • Next, ask those who are not injured or who have
    minor injuries to identify themselves

12
Walking wounded
Triage
  • When entering room or area, shout out,
  • if you can hear me, come to the sound
  • of my voice.
  • Self rescue is best rescue
  • Tag GREEN for minor, Send to a safe area
  • Ask about other victims in area

13
Triage Categories
14
International Triage Color Codes
Triage
Red immediate
Yellow delayed
  • Green minor  

Black deceased
15
TRIAGE
16
TRIAGE
17
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18
S.T.A.R.T.
  • Simple Triage and Rapid Treatment
  • developed by
  • Newport Beach Fire Department
  • and
  • Hoag Memorial Hospital
  • Newport Beach, California

19
S.T.A.R.T.
  • When performing the triage
  • function, regardless of
  • incident size
  • DONT GET DISTRACTED!
  • Move quickly
  • Focus your attention on IMMEDIATE patients
  • The goal is to stay focused on RED

20
S.T.A.R.T.
Triage Priorities
  • Your initial goal is to find IMMEDIATE
  • patients.
  • You want to find the red and get it out
  • (kind of like Visine!)
  • Your efforts should focus on locating all
    IMMEDIATE patients, getting them treated and
    transporting them as soon as possible
  • Once IMMEDIATE patients have been
  • treated and transported
  • Reassess all DELAYED patients and upgrade any to
    IMMEDIATE depending on their injury, age,
    medical history, etc.

21
S.T.A.R.T.
  • Victims who have self-extricated
  • themselves prior to arrival can
  • be labeled MINOR
  • All other patients should be tagged
  • IMMEDIATE, DELAYED
  • or DEAD/DYING
  • depending on your assessment

22
S.T.A.R.T.
  • With START one patient is assessed
  • every 30 seconds
  • First responder quickly assesses to
  • categorize a patients condition
  • Airway and respiration
  • Pulse and / or capillary refill
  • Level of consciousness

23
S.T.A.R.T.
  • The only treatment rendered by the triage
  • team is to
  • Open a patients airway by head tilt / neck lift
  • Apply direct pressure to stop an obvious bleed
  • Elevating the extremities

24
S.T.A.R.T.
  • Only three items are checked when using
  • START
  • Respiration
  • Pulse
  • Mental Status
  • Just remember RPM

25
TEST
Triage
  • Put the triage evaluation steps in
  • the correct order.
  • Check mental status
  • Check airway/breathing
  • Check bleeding/circulation

26
Triage
  • ANSWER

Check mental status 3 Check
airway/breathing 1 Check bleeding/circulation 2

27
Step 1
S.T.A.R.T.
  • Triage officer announces that all patients that
    can walk should get up and walk to a designated
    area for eventual secondary triage.
  • All ambulatory patients are initially tagged as
    Green

28
Step 2
S.T.A.R.T.
  • Assess respiratory rate
  • If 30, assess Perfusion
  • If ? 30, tag patient as Red

29
Step 3
S.T.A.R.T.
  • Assess capillary refill
  • If 2 seconds, assess Mental Status
  • If ? 2 seconds, tag as Red

30
Step 4
S.T.A.R.T.
  • Assess mental status
  • If able to obey commands, tag as Yellow
  • If unable to obey commands, tag as Red

31
S.T.A.R.T.
32
Mnemonic
S.T.A.R.T.
  • R 30
  • P 2
  • M Can Do

33
S.T.A.R.T.
SELF TEST
  • Patient I is 21 year old male complaining of
  • pain to his upper right leg. You see an
  • obvious open right femur fracture.
  • What is your START assessment?

34
S.T.A.R.T.
SELF TEST
  • Patient I is 21 year old male complaining of pain
  • To his upper right leg. You see an obvious open
  • Right femur fracture.
  • The patient is awake, his airway is open, hes
  • talking) and his respirations are over
    30/minute.
  • Using RPM, the patient is categorized as
    IMMEDIATE.
  • Because his respirations are over 30 per minute.
  • What is your treatment? None during triage.

35
S.T.A.R.T.
SELF TEST
  • Patient 2 is a 15-year-old female,
  • complaining of numbness to her legs, is
  • unable to move them. You see a 2
  • laceration on left skull, moderate bleeding.
  • What is your START assessment?

36
S.T.A.R.T.
SELF TEST
  • Patient 2 is a 15-year-old female, complaining of
  • numbness to her legs, is unable to move them.
  • You see a 2" laceration on left skull, moderate
  • bleeding.
  • She is awake, her airway is open, her
    respirations are under 30 a minute and she has a
    radial pulse.
  • Her RPM assessment indicated she is DELAYED.
  • Why? Her respirations were under 30, she has a
    radial pulse and she is alert and oriented.

37
S.T.A.R.T.
SELF TEST
  • Patient 3 is a 40-year-old male who looks
  • Really bad. Hes unconscious, pale and
  • limp.
  • What is your START assessment?

38
S.T.A.R.T.
SELF TEST
  • Patient 3 is a 40-year-old male who looks really
  • bad. Hes unconscious, pale and limp.
  • When you open the patients airway, there is no
    breathing.
  • What is your treatment? Should you work him?
  • Maybe. Maybe not.

39
S.T.A.R.T.
  • To review, there are three medical
  • treatments performed when utilizing
  • START triage
  • Open an airway
  • Stop any visible bleeding
  • Elevate the extremities for shock

40
S.T.A.R.T.
  • The DEAD / DYING are those who cannot
  • breathe after the airway is opened and
  • are mortally wounded
  • The patient will probably die despite the best
    resuscitation efforts
  • It is often a difficult decision to leave a dying
    patient, especially if it is a child
  • Remember resources are often wasted on
    unsalvageable victims

41
Triage is a dynamic process and is usually done
more than once.
Triage
42
Triage
Primary Triage
Secondary Triage
Tertiary Triage
43
Triage
CERT Manual Medical Operations
44
Triage
45
Triage Pitfalls
S.T.A.R.T.
  • Time will be critical! Very little time with any
    single victim
  • Take advantage of local exercises as a means of
    maintaining your triage skills and to avoid
    triage pitfalls
  • Triage pitfalls include No team plan,
    organization, or goal
  • Indecisive leadership - too much focus on one
    injury
  • Treatment (rather than triage) performed

46
Triage
Conducting a Triage Evaluation
  • How would you tag each of the victims described
  • below?
  • G Green, Minor Y Yellow, Delay
  • R Red, Immediate B Black, Dead
  • No bleeding. Dazed and confused. Doesn't
    squeeze hand when asked.
  • Ambulatory. Responds to voice triage. Minor
    bleeding. Normal blanch.
  • Very bloody thigh. Unconscious. After two
    attempts to open airway, still not breathing.
  • No signs of bleeding. Unconscious. Capillary
    refill takes 5 seconds.
  • Minor bleeding. Conscious but disoriented.
    Breathing rate is 40 per minute.

47
  • JumpSTART
  • Pediatric Triage

by Dr. Lou Romig
48
Pediatric MCI Triage
JumpSTART
  • Developed by Lou Romig MD, FAAP, FACEP
  • Widespread use throughout US and Canada
  • Being taught in Worldwide
  • Recognized by the US National Disaster Medical
    System
  • Published in Bradys Prehospital Emergency Care,
    7th ed.
  • www.jumpstarttriage.com

49
JumpSTART
We must assume each MCI will include children.
We must be able to assess and treat victims of
all ages with equal confidence and competence.
50
JumpSTART
  • The physiology of adults and children are not the
    same.

51
Age
JumpSTART
  • Initially ages 1-8 years chosen
  • Less than one year of age is less likely to be
    ambulatory.
  • The pertinent pediatric physiology (specifically,
    the airway) approaches that of adults by
    approximately eight years of age.

52
Age
JumpSTART
  • Current recommendation
  • If a victim appears to be a child, use JumpSTART.
  • If a victim appears to be a young adult, use
    START.

53
Age
  • Current recommendation
  • If a victim appears to be a child, use JumpSTART.
  • If a victim appears to be a young adult, use
    START.

54
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55
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56
Potential Problems with Children
  • An apneic child is more likely to have a primary
    respiratory problem than an adult. Perfusion may
    be maintained for a short time and the child may
    be salvageable.
  • RR /- 30 may either over-triage or under-triage
    a child, depending on age .

57
Potential Problems with Children
  • Capillary refill may not adequately reflect
    peripheral hemodynamic status in a cool
    environment.
  • Obeying commands may not be an appropriate gauge
    of mental status for younger children.

58
Modification for nonambulatory children
  • All children carried to the GREEN area by other
    ambulatory victims must be the first assessed by
    medical personnel in that area.

59
Breathing?
  • If breathing spontaneously, go on to the next
    step, assessing respiratory rate.
  • If apneic or with very irregular breathing, open
    the airway using standard positioning techniques.
  • If positioning results in resumption of
    spontaneous respirations, tag the patient
    immediate and move on.

60
The Jumpstart Part
  • If no breathing after airway opening, check for
    peripheral pulse. If no pulse, tag patient
    deceased/nonsalvageable and move on.
  • If there is a peripheral pulse, give 5 mouth to
    barrier ventilations. If apnea persists, tag
    patient deceased/nonsalvageable and move on.
  • If breathing resumes after the jumpstart, tag
    patient immediate and move on.

61
JumpSTART Respiratory Rate
  • If respiratory rate is 15-45/min, proceed to
    assess perfusion.
  • If respiratory rate is lt15 or gt45/min or
    irregular, tag patient as immediate and move on.

62
JumpSTARTPerfusion
  • If peripheral pulse is palpable, proceed to
    assess mental status.
  • If no peripheral pulse is present (in the least
    injured limb), tag patient immediate and move on.

63
JumpSTART Mental Status
  • Use AVPU scale to assess mental status.
  • If Alert, responsive to Verbal, or appropriately
    responsive to Pain, tag as delayed and move on.
  • If inappropriately responsive to Pain or
    Unresponsive, tag as immediate and move on.

64
Modification for nonambulatory children
  • Infants who normally cant walk yet
  • Children with developmental delay
  • Children with acute injuries preventing them from
    walking before the incident
  • Children with chronic disabilities

65
Modification for nonambulatory children
  • Evaluate using the JS algorithm
  • If any RED criteria, tag as RED.
  • If pt satisfies YELLOW criteria
  • YELLOW if significant external signs of injury
    are found (ie. deep penetrating wounds, severe
    bleeding, severe burns, amputations, distended
    tender abdomen)

66
Modification for nonambulatory children
  • GREEN if no significant external injury

67
Individuals with special health care needs may
also be MCI victims!
68
Note for Black Category Victims
  • Unless clearly suffering from injuries
    incompatible with life, victims tagged in the
    BLACK category should be reassessed once critical
    interventions have been completed for RED and
    YELLOW patients.

69
Whats your call?
JumpSTART
  • A school aged girl crawls out of a house
  • after an explosion. Shes able to stand
  • and walk toward you crying.
  • Jacket and shirt torn
  • No obvious bleeding

70
Whats your call?
JumpSTART
  • A toddler lies with his lower body
  • trapped under a seat inside the bus.
  • Apneic
  • Remains apneic with modified jaw thrust
  • No pulse

71
Whats your call?
JumpSTART
  • A toddler lies in a seat after a
  • motor vehicle wreckage.
  • RR 50
  • Palpable distal pulse
  • Withdraws from painful stimulus

72
Whats your call?
JumpSTART
  • An infant is carried by the previous
  • victim.
  • Hes screaming but the woman quiets him to RR of
    34
  • Good distal pulse
  • Focuses on rescuer, reaches for mom.
  • No obvious significant external injuries.

73
Key Points about MCI Triage
Triage
  • MCI triage will never be
  • logistically, intellectually,
  • or emotionally easy
  • We must be prepared
  • to do it using the best of
  • our knowledge and
  • abilities.

74
For more information on JumpSTART
www.jumpstarttriage.com Lou Romig
MD LouRomig_at_bellsouth.net
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