| Literature DB >> 21982119 |
Ramesh P Aacharya1, Chris Gastmans, Yvonne Denier.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Emergency departments across the globe follow a triage system in order to cope with overcrowding. The intention behind triage is to improve the emergency care and to prioritize cases in terms of clinical urgency. DISCUSSION: In emergency department triage, medical care might lead to adverse consequences like delay in providing care, compromise in privacy and confidentiality, poor physician-patient communication, failing to provide the necessary care altogether, or even having to decide whose life to save when not everyone can be saved. These consequences challenge the ethical quality of emergency care. This article provides an ethical analysis of "routine" emergency department triage. The four principles of biomedical ethics - viz. respect for autonomy, beneficence, nonmaleficence and justice provide the starting point and help us to identify the ethical challenges of emergency department triage. However, they do not offer a comprehensive ethical view. To address the ethical issues of emergency department triage from a more comprehensive ethical view, the care ethics perspective offers additional insights.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21982119 PMCID: PMC3199257 DOI: 10.1186/1471-227X-11-16
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Emerg Med ISSN: 1471-227X
Five-level Triage Systems
| System | Countries | Levels | Patient should be seen by provider within |
|---|---|---|---|
| Australia | 1 - Resuscitation | Level 1 - 0 minutes | |
| New Zealand | 2 - Emergency | Level 2 - 10 minutes | |
| 3 - Urgent | Level 3 - 30 minutes | ||
| 4 - Semi-urgent | Level 4 - 60 minutes | ||
| 5 - Nonurgent | Level 5 - 120 minutes | ||
| England | 1 - Immediate (red) | Level 1 - 0 minutes | |
| Scotland | 2 - Very urgent (orange) | Level 2 - 10 minutes | |
| 3 - Urgent (yellow) | Level 3 - 60 minutes | ||
| 4 - Standard (green) | Level 4 - 120 minutes | ||
| 5 - Nonurgent (blue) | Level 5 - 240 minutes | ||
| Canada | 1 - Resuscitation | Level 1 - 0 minutes | |
| 2 - Emergent | Level 2 - 15 minutes | ||
| 3 - Urgent | Level 3 - 30 minutes | ||
| 4 - Less urgent | Level 4 - 60 minutes | ||
| 5 - Nonurgent | Level 5 - 120 minutes | ||
Table 2-2 Five-level Triage Systems
Figure 1Emergency Severity Index (ESI) .
Figure 2SALT triage scheme. LSI = Life Saving Interventions.
Figure 3START Triage algorithm for adult patient. Adapted from http://www.start-triage.com/