Start Triage
Start Triage
Start Triage
By using a casualty sorting system, you are focusing your activities in the middle
of a chaotic and confusing environment. You must identify and separate patients
rapidly, according to the severity of their injuries and their need for treatment.
En route
Even while you are responding to the scene of an incident, you should be
preparing yourself mentally for what you may find. Perhaps you've been to the
same location before. Where will help come from? How long will it take to arrive?
The first thing you should do upon arriving at the scene of an incident is to try to
stay calm, look around, and get an overview of the scene. These visual surveys
give you an initial impression of the overall situation, including the potential
number of patients involved, and possibly, even the severity of their injuries. The
visual survey should enable you to estimate initially the amount and type of help
needed to handle the situation.
The initial report is often the most important message of a disaster because it sets
the emotional and operational stage for everything that follows. As you prepare to
give the first vital report, use clear language (no signals or radio jargon), be
concise, be calm, and do not shout. You are trying to give the communications
center a concise verbal picture of the scene.
Note: Be as specific with your requests as possible. Field experience has shown
that a good rule of thumb initially, in multiple- or mass-casualty situations, is to
request one ambulance for every five patients. For example, for 35 patient s,
request seven ambulances; for 23 patients request five ambulances, and so forth.
Before starting, take several deep breaths to give your mind time to catch up with
your eyes and to try to calm your voice. You might give the following report: "This
is a major accident involving a truck and a commercial bus on Highway 305,
about 2 miles east of Route 610. There are approximately 35 victims. There are
people trapped. Repeat: This is a major accident. I am requesting the fire
department, rescue squad, and seven ambulances at this time. Dispatch
additional police units to assist."
It is important not to become involved with the treatment of the first or second
patient with whom you come in contact. Remember that your job is to get to each
patient as quickly as possible, conduct a rapid assessment, and assign patients to
broad categories based on their need for treatment.
The patients who are left in place are the ones on whom you must now concentrate.
The Simple Triage And Rapid Treatment (START) system was developed to allow
first responders to triage multiple victims in 30 seconds or less, based on three
primary observations: Respiration, Perfusion, and Mental Status (RPM). The START
system is designed to assist rescuers to find the most seriously injured patients. As
more rescue personnel arrive on the scene, the patients will be re-triaged for further
evaluation, treatment, stabilization, and transportation. This system allows first
responders to open blocked airways and stop severe bleeding quickly.
Patients are tagged for easy recognition by other rescuers arriving on the scene.
Tagging is done using a variety of methods determined by your local Emergency
Services System. Colored surveyors' tape or colored paper tags may be used.
delayed care
MINOR
/ can delay up to three hours urgent care / can delay up to
one hour immediate
DELAYED care / life-threatening
victim is IMMEDIATE
dead / no care required
DEAD
The first step in START is to tell all the people who can get up and walk to move to a
specific area. If patients can get up and walk, they are probably not at risk of
immediate death.
In order to make the situation more manageable, those victims who can walk are
asked to move away from the immediate rescue scene to a specific designated safe
area. These patients are now designated as . If a patient complains of pain
on attempting to walk or move, do not force him or her to move.
The patients who are left in place are the ones on whom you must now concentrate.
Begin the second step of START by moving from where you stand. Move in an orderly
and systematic manner through the remaining victims, stopping at each person for a
quick assessment and tagging. The stop at each patient should never take more than
one minute.
REMEMBER: Your job is to find and tag the patients --those who require immediate
attention. Examine each patient, correct life-threatening airways and breathing
problems, tag the patient with a tag and MOVE ON!
If the patient is breathing, you then need to determine the breathing rate. Patients
with breathing rates greater than 30 per minute are tagged . These
patients are showing one of the primary signs of shock and need immediate care.
If the patient is breathing and the breathing rate is less than 30 per minute, move
on to the circulation and mental status observations in order to complete your 30-
second survey.
If the patient is not breathing, quickly clear the mouth of foreign matter. Use a head-
tilt maneuver to open the airway. In this type of multiple- or mass-casualty situation,
you may have to ignore the usual cervical spine guidelines when you are opening
airways during the triage process.
Open the airway, position the patient to maintain the airway and — if the patient
breathes —tag the patient . Patients who need help maintaining an open
airway are .
If you are in doubt as to the patient's ability to breathe, tag the patient as .
If the patient is not breathing and does not start to breathe with simple airway
maneuvers, the patient should be tagged .
The second step of the RPM series of triage tests is the patient’s circulation. The best
field method for checking circulation (to see if the heart is able to circulate blood
adequately) is to check the radial pulse.
The last part of the RPM series of triage tests is the mental status of the patient. This
observation is done on patients who have adequate breathing and adequate
circulation.
"Open your eyes." "Close your eyes," "Squeeze my hand." Patients who can follow
these simple commands and have adequate breathing and adequate circulation are
tagged . A patient who is unresponsive or cannot follow this type of simple
command is tagged . (These patients are "unresponsive" to verbal stimuli.)
This system is designed to assist rescuers to find the most seriously injured patients.
As more rescue personnel arrive on the scene, the patients will be re-triaged for
further evaluation, treatment, stabilization, and transportation. A patient may be re-
triaged as many times and as often as time allows.
Remember that injured patients do not stay in the same condition. The process of
shock may continue and some conditions will become more serious as time goes by.
As time and resources permit, go back and recheck the condition of all patients to
catch changes in condition that may require upgrading to attention.
You may or may not be the first person to arrive on the scene of a multiple- or mass-
casualty incident. If other rescuers are already at the scene when you arrive, be sure
to report to the incident commander before going to work. Many events are
happening at the same time and the incident commander will know where your help
and skills can best be used. By virtue of training and local protocols, the incident
commander is that person who is in charge of the rescue operation.
After you have reported this information, you may be assigned to use your skills and
knowledge to provide patient care, traffic control, fire protection, or patient
movement. You may also be assigned to provide emergency care to patients, to help
move patients, or to assist with ambulance or helicopter transportation.
In every situation involving casualty sorting, the goal is to find, stabilize and move
Priority One patients first.
The single most important step when handling any hazardous materials incident is to
identify the substance(s) involved. Federal law requires that hazardous materials
placards be displayed on all vehicles that contain large quantities of hazardous
materials. Manufacturers and transporters should display the appropriate placard,
along with a four-digit identification number, for better identification of the hazardous
substance. These numbers are used by professional agencies to identify the substance
and to obtain emergency information.
Unless you have received training in handling hazardous materials and can take the
necessary precautions to protect yourself, you should keep far away from the
contaminated area or "hot zone."
Once the appropriate protection of the rescuers has been accomplished, triage in
hazardous materials incidents has one major function--to identify victims who have
sustained an acute injury as a result of exposure to hazardous materials. These
patients should be removed from the contaminated area, decontaminated by trained
personnel, given any necessary emergency care, and transported to a hospital.
Summary
Every responder must understand the principles and operations behind your casualty
sorting system. The START system is an excellent and easily understood triage or
casualty sorting method.
Responders should be involved in periodic community disaster drills so that their skills
and capabilities can be tested and improved.