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Emergency Department Triage Manual, T-U

Emergency Department Triage Manual, T-U

ED Triage Manual, T-U


  • Trauma Activation Criteria do not affect your ESI Triage level.
  • Activation criteria determines how the patient will be treated.

Trauma – Extremity

1 Critical 2 Acute 3 Urgent 4 Urgent 5 Non-Urgent
Trauma with uncontrollable bleeding or hemodynamic compromise
  • Digit amputation
  • Open fracture
  • Femoral point tenderness, edema
  • Impaired distal neurovascular status
  • Absent perfusion to extremity
  • Laceration repair needing
    X-ray or sedation
  • Nailbed injury
  • Dislocated distal joint
  • Displaced fracture
  • Dislocated proximal joint
  • Suspected Nursemaid’s elbow
  • Suspected clavicle fracture
  • Mild swelling without deformity of ankle in children > 13 yrs of age
  • Edema over injury
  • Simple laceration repair
  • Point tenderness
Abrasion
Assess and document skin integrity and neurovascular status distal to the injury.

Trauma – Face

1 Critical 2 Acute 3 Urgent 4 Urgent 5 Non-Urgent
  • Significant facial swelling or bruising
  • Facial deformity
  • Inability to close mouth
  • Possible globe injury
  • Inability to assess eye
  • Injury to secondary tooth
  • Palatal injury/bleeding
Laceration requiring sedation
  • Simple laceration
  • Active epistaxis
Superficial abrasions and contusions with minor mechanism
See Triage Trauma – Head, Neck, and Dental Emergencies
1 Critical 2 Acute 3 Urgent 4 Urgent 5 Non-Urgent
  • Mental Status Changes
    • GCS < 14
    • Combative
    • Hard to arouse
    • Inconsolable
  • Bulging fontanelle
  • Laceration with uncontrolled bleeding
  • See Critical Criteria
  • Hemophilia
    • Symptomatic
    • No correction at home
  • Head trauma with any of the following:
    • Age < 3 mos
    • LOC/amnesia
    • Post-traumatic seizures
    • Persistent vomiting (> 2 episodes of vomiting or any vomiting in the ED)
    • Significant or severe headache
    • GCS = 14
  • PE
    • Irritable/change in behavior
    • Periorbital bruising
    • Bruising over mastoid
    • Fluid or blood from the ear
  • History of coagulopathy
  • Cervical spine tenderness
  • Parathesias
  • Weakness
  • Any suspicion for non-accidental trauma
  • Ataxia
  • Hemophilia
    • Asymptomatic and
    • Correction at home
  • Normal mental status:
  • Any age
    • Large non-frontal hematoma
  • < 12 mos
    • Any large hematoma
  • < 2 yrs
    • Non-frontal hematoma
  • Age > 3 mos – 2 yrs with normal PE or small frontal hematoma
  • > 2 yrs with minor mechanism, well-appearing, with small hematoma or abrasion
  • Trauma history > 12 hrs ago with normal PE
See Trauma - Neck

Trauma – Neck

1 Critical 2 Acute 3 Urgent 4 Urgent 5 Non-Urgent
  • Neck pain
  • Significant mechanism of injury
  • Blunt injury to neck with:
    • Weakness
    • Paresthesias
    • Numbness
  • Change in voice
  • Cervical spine tenderness*
  • Significant injury and inability to assess neck due to age*
  • Penetrating Trauma
   
  • Minor mechanism with no physical findings
  • Minor hematomas or contusions of neck
  • Abrasions
  • *See Triage Trauma – Head
  • All patients with hx: trauma, limited ROM to neck, cervical tenderness should be collared and flat on stretcher.

Trauma – Torso

1 Critical 2 Acute 3 Urgent 4 Urgent 5 Non-Urgent
  • Cardiac or respiratory compromise
  • Mental status change
  • Gross hemorrhage
  • Laceration with uncontrollable bleeding
  • Muffled heart sounds
  • Decreased breath sounds
  • Peritoneal signs
  • Penetrating trauma to torso
  • High-velocity blunt trauma to torso
  • Tachycardia
  • Chest pain
  • Difficulty voiding
  • Scrotal edema, pain
  • Abdominal pain
  • Gross hematuria
  • Significant contusion or abrasion with suspected underlying injury
Laceration without suspected underlying injury requiring sedation
  • Point tender clavicle after low mechanism injury
  • Simple laceration without suspected underlying injury not needing sedation
  • Rib tenderness with no respiratory symptoms
Superficial abrasion or contusion without suspected underlying injury

Urine Output

1 Critical 2 Acute 3 Urgent 4 Urgent 5 Non-Urgent
 
  • Hypertension
  • Altered mental status with
    2 or more:
    • Polyuria
    • Polyphagia
    • Polydipsia
    • Weight loss
  • Anuria with:
    • Pitting edema
    • Facial edema
  • Normal PE with reported high blood sugar +/- ketones in urine
  • Normal PE with 2 or more:
    • Polyuria
    • Polyphagia
    • Polydipsia
    • Weight loss
  • Oliguria with:
    • Tacky mucous membranes
    • Tachycardia
    • Decreased tears
  • Unable to cath self
  • Hematuria with:
    • Flank pain
  • Urgency
  • Increased frequency
  • Dysuria
  • Fever
  • Hematuria
  • Polyuria
 

 

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