| Literature DB >> 27822127 |
Abstract
The study of disaster triage is made difficult by the complex emotional response of potentially lifesaving intervention that a triage officer must make basing decisions on a succinct and efficient algorithm. A survey of triage professionals in international settings was designed to identify possible emotionally led bias that affects objective decision making in identifying victims most likely to benefit from immediate life support intervention. This survey suggests a lack of correlation between triage priority and predictable clinical outcomes as predicted by the Revised Trauma Score tool. Among the subjects, it was observed that a pediatric victim is uniformly overtriaged when compared to less injured victims.Entities:
Keywords: People’s Republic of China; disaster triage; emotional bias; obstetric trauma; pediatric trauma; triage
Year: 2016 PMID: 27822127 PMCID: PMC5089824 DOI: 10.2147/OAEM.S96913
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Open Access Emerg Med ISSN: 1179-1500
Figure 1START: Simple Triage and Rapid Treatment algorithm.
Notes: Copyright © 1983 Hoag Hospital Newport Beach and Newport Beach Fire Department. Reproduced from Critical Illness and Trauma Foundation, Inc. website. The following algorithm is available for referral. It is only a set of recommendations, reflecting a commonly used disaster triage decision process. Used by permission of Hoag Hospital Newport Beach and Newport Beach Fire Department who developed START Triage (info@start-triage.com).
Abbreviations: START, Simple Treatment and Rapid Transport; min, minutes.
Triage scenario
| Sex | Age | Complaints | BP/HR/RR | Disability | GCS | Pupils | Secondary Survey |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Male | 52 | Unresponsive | BP 40/10 | Unresponsive | 6 (E1M3V2) | Dilated and fixed | Decorticate posturing, moans, absence of breath sounds left chest with large contusion, partial amputation below left knee with risk bleeding, scalp clear |
| Male | 4 | Unresponsive | BP 60/40 | Unresponsive | 3 (E1M1V1) | Equal bilaterally | Obtunded, pale, diaphoretic; respiratory distress and paradoxical movements of left posterolateral chest wall, deformity of right thigh and left lower leg, contusions on abdominal wall, scalp clear |
| Female | 47 | Unresponsive, snoring respirations | BP 80/20 | Unresponsive, no sounds or movement observed | 3 (E1M1V1) | Equal, reactive | Penetrating trauma to left neck with brisk bleeding, cervical spine injury and flaccid paralysis, left chest wall crepitus with decreased air entry, scalp clear. |
| Female | 55 | Moaning | BP unrecordable | Flexes to pain, opens eyes | 8 (E2M3V3) | Left 3mm, right 4mm, slightly reactive | Airway partially obstructed by blood and loose teeth, palpable left-sided chest wall crepitus, bilateral equal air entry, compound fracture of left mandible and right elbow, open fractures bilateral ankles |
| Female | 25 | Unresponsive | BP 40/0 | Pregnant 32–35 weeks | 3 (E1M1V1) | Equal, reactive | Unresponsive, abdomen is gravid, obvious pelvic fracture, crepitus over pubic symphysis, brisk vaginal bleeding, flail chest and decreased air entry bilaterally, scalp clear |
| Male | 38 | Moaning | BP unrecordable | Moans in pain, does not answer questions | 8 (E1M5V2) | Equal, reactive | Impaled with metal beam through thoracoabdominal area, bleeding briskly, head trauma with face covered in blood, deformity of bilateral thighs |
Notes: Triage Scenario: bus vs train. Rural area, you are the first responder. Two ambulances available, only two patients in total can be transported. It can be reasonably assumed that the patients not transported will die. Please triage the following patients: green/yellow/red/black (expectant/dying). The six patient vignettes are the same as the last scenario. This is not a test, but a survey of triage judgment in a disaster scenario. There is no right or wrong answer.
Abbreviations: BP, blood pressure; HR, hazard ratio; RR, relative risk; GCS, Glasgow Coma Scale.
Figure 2Survival probability by revised trauma scale.
Note: Copyright © 2016 Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. Reproduced from Champion HR, Sacco WJ, Copes WS, Gann DS, Gennarelli TA, Flanagan ME. A revision of the trauma score. J Trauma. 1989;29(5):623–629.12
Abbreviation: RTS, Revised Trauma Score.
Survival chance of six patients and frequency of preferable selection
| 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| ||||||
| Adult | Child | Adult | OB Pt | Adult | Adult | |
| Chicago (n=31), % | 3 | 74 | 3 | 48 | 52 | 19 |
| Pennsylvania (n=18), % | 6 | 78 | 11 | 61 | 33 | 11 |
| Beijing (n=14), % | 7 | 57 | 7 | 28 | 57 | 43 |
| Average (n=63), % | 5 | 71 | 6 | 48 | 48 | 22 |
Abbreviation: Pt, patient; OB, Obstetric.
Figure 3Frequency of preferable selection in triage by patient and center.
Abbreviation: ED, emergency department.
Figure 4JumpSTART algorithm.
Note: Copyright © 2002, Reproduced from Romig LE. Pediatric triage. A system to JumpSTART your triage of young patients at MCIs. JEMS. 2002;27(7):52–58. Used by permission of JEMS, owned by PennWell Corporation.18
Abbreviations: START, Simple Treatment and Rapid Transport; MCI, mass casualty incident; JS, Jump START; A, alert; V, voice; P, pain; U, unresponsive.