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Continuous integrated triageContinuous integrated triage is an approach to triage in mass casualty situations which is both efficient and sensitive to psychosocial and disaster behavioral health issues that effect the number of patients seeking care (surge), the manner in which a hospital or healthcare facility deals with that surge (surge capacity) and the overarching medical needs of the event.
Additional recommended knowledge
HistoryContinuous Integrated Triage was developed by the Founding Chairperson of the American Board of Disaster Medicine by applying the lessons learned at the Louis Armstrong International Airport in New Orleans, LA following hurricane Katrina to Mass Casualty Traige at hospitals and healthcare institutions. Application and TechniqueUsing a Group (Global) Triage method (i.e. M.A.S.S. traige), patients are divided into ambulatory (green) and non-ambulatory (red, yellow & black) triage categories. Overview of continuous integrated triageGroup (global) triage (mass triage)Ambulatory with minimal or no assistance (Green triage area)
Non-ambulatory follows commands (Yellow triage area)
Non-ambulatory and unresponsive/inappropriate (Physiological triage)
Physiological (individual) triage (START/JumpSTART)Respirations
Pulse
Mentation
Hospital Triage
Categories: Medical emergencies | Military medicine | Disaster medicine |
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This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Continuous_integrated_triage". A list of authors is available in Wikipedia. |