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Triage in Emergency Department Triage Waiting room Team leader

Triage In Emergency Department

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Page 1: Triage In Emergency Department

Triage in Emergency Department

TriageWaiting room

Team leader

Page 2: Triage In Emergency Department

Definition of Triage

• Triage is the term derived from the French verb trier meaning to sort or to choose

It’s the process by which patients classified according to the type and urgency of their conditions to get the Right patient to the

Right place at the Right time with the Right care provider

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Triage Categories

• Non disaster: To provide the best care for each individual patient.

• Multi casualty/disaster: To provide the most effective care for the greatest number of patients.

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Non disaster or E.D triage

The primary objectives of an ED triage are to (ENA,1992, P. 1):

1. Identify patients requiring immediate care.2. Determine the appropriate area for

treatment3. Facilitate patient flow through the ED and

avoid unnecessary congestion.

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4. Provide continued assessment and reassessment of arriving and waiting patients.

5. Provide information and referrals to patients and families.

6. Allay patient and family anxiety and enhance public relations.

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Disaster

• Definition: an incident, either natural or human-made, that produces patients in numbers needing services beyond immediately available resources. May involve a large no. of patients or a small no. of patients if their needs place significant demands on resources.

• The key to successful disaster management is to provide care to those who are in greatest need first and just as importantly, not provide care to to those who have little or no chance of survival. Correct triage is essential to accomplish this goal

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Disaster

The triage teamTriage of Victims

- first victims to arrive are frequently not the most seriously injured.Critical patientsFatally Injured PatientsNon critical patientsContaminated patients

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Types of E.D. triage system

• Type 1: Traffic Director (Non Nurse).• Type 2: Spot Check• Type 3: Comprehensive

• Two-tiered systems: intial screening by RN who greets each patients on arrival, perform a primary survey and determine whether the patient is able to wait for further assessment by a second triage nurse.

• Divide tasks among staff members, internal triage and external triage

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Triage levels

1- Resuscitation2- Emergent3- urgent4- less urgent5- Non urgentThe Canadian E.D. Triage and Acuity Scale

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Overview of three category triage acuity systemscategory acuity Recommended

reassessmentExamples

Class 1 EmergentImmediately life or limb threatening

continuous Cardiopulmonary arrest, severe respiratory distress, major burns, major trauma, massive uncontrolled bleeding

Coma, status epil..

Class 2 UrgentRequires prompt care, but will not cause loss of life or limb if left untreated for several hours.

Every 30 minutes

Abdominal pain, non cardiac cp, multiple fractures, lacerations, renal calculi,

Class 3 Non urgentAnd treatment but time is not a critical factor

Every 1-2 hrs

Rash, chronic headache, sprains, cold symptoms

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TRIAGE LEVELS1- Resuscitation -- threat to life

Time to nurse assessment IMMEDIATE Time to physician assessment IMMEDIATE

• Cardiac and respiratory arrest• Major trauma• Active seizure• Shock• Status Asthmatics

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Triage levels2- Emergent Potential threat to life,limb or function Nurse Immediate , Physician <15 minutes• Decreased level of consciousness• Severe respiratory distress• Chest pain with cardiac suspicion• Over dose (conscious)• Severe abdominal pain• G.I. Bleed with abnormal vital signs• Chemical exposure to eye

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Triage levels

3- UrgentCondition with significant distressTime Nurse < 20 min, physician < 30 minHead injury without decrease of LOC but

with vomiting• Mild to moderate respiratory distress• G.I. Bleed not actively bleed• Acute psychosis

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Triage levels

4- Less urgentConditions with mild to moderate discomfortTime for Nurse assessment <1h Time for physician assessment < 1hHead injury, alert, no vomitingChest pain, no distress, no cardiac susp.Depression with no suicidal attempt

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Triage levels5- Non urgentConditions can be delayed, no distressTime for nurse and Physician assessment

more than 2h• Minor trauma• Sore throat with temp. < 39

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Basic component of triage

• An “across-the room” assessment• The triage history• The triage physical assessment• The triage decision

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An “ across the room assessment”

To identify obvious life threat conditionsGeneral appearance

Air wayBreathing

Circulation

Disability(neurogenic)

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Across the door assessment•The triage nurse must scan the area where patients enter the emergency door, even while interviewing other patient.•The triage antenna should be seeking clues to problems in all people who enter the triage area•If any patient doesn’t look right kindly but quickly interrupt any current interaction and go investigate.

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Across the room assessment

• Air wayAbnormal airway sounds, strider, wheezing gruntingUnusual posture e.g.. Sniffing position, inability to

speak, drooling or inability to handle secretion• Breathing

Altered skin signs, cyanosis, dusky skin, tachypnicbradypnea, or apnea periods, retractions, use accessory muscles, nasal flaring, grunting, or audible wheezes

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Across the room assessment• CirculationAltered skin signs, pale, mottling, flushingUn controlled bleeding• Disability (neuro.)

LOC Interaction with environment Inability to recognize family members Unusual irritability

Response to pain or stimuliFlaccid or hyper active muscle tone

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Characteristics of triage nurse

• Extensive knowledge to emergency medical treatment

• Adequate training and competent skills,language, terminology

• Ability to use the critical thinker process• Good decision maker

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Role of triage nurse

• Greet patients and identify your self.• Maintain privacy and confidentiality• Visualize all incoming patients even while

interviewing others.• Maintain good communication between triage and

treatment area• maintain excellent communication with waiting

area.• Use all resources to maintain high standard of care.

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Role of triage nurse

• Teaching ----- use of thermometer, first aid ??? avoid lecturing.

• Crowd control.• Telephone.• Communicate with team leader and seek

feed back on decisions.

Page 24: Triage In Emergency Department

Importance of re triage• Reassess the patient within 1-2hours of

initial triage and continue to re assess on a regular basis, patients who may have presented without cardinal signs of severe illness may develop them during long waits.

• Patients who appear intoxicated actually may have life threatening problems such as DKA, and should not be permitted to keep it off in the waiting room.

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•The last person in along line at triage may have a serious medical problem that requires immediate attention

•Patient should wait no longer than 5 minutes for triage

If in doubt about a category, choose the higher acuity to avoid under triaging a patient