II. Indications
- Mass Casualty Incident (MCI) triage method targeted for use in children
III. Background
- JumpSTART Triage system is the most commonly used pediatric Mass Casualty Incident (MCI) triage system in the United States
- Adult patients are best triaged with the START Triage or SALT Triage protocols
IV. Categories: Triage
- Minor (Green)
- "Walking wounded" with minor injuries
- Status not expected to deteriorate over days
- Delayed (Yellow)
- Urgent transport and care (may be delayed up to 1 hour)
- May include serious and potentially life-threatening wounds
- Status not expected to deteriorate during the delay
- Immediate (Red)
- Immediate care for life threatening injuries
- Requires medical attention within minutes for survival
- Includes injuries affecting airway, breathing and circulation
- Expectant (Black)
- Victim is unlikely survive based on injuries and available resources
- Palliative Care with Pain Medications should be considered
V. Evaluation
- Walking Wounded
- Triage to minor (and secondary triage process)
- Assess Respirations
- No respiratory effort
- Position airway
- Indications to triage to Immediate
- Spontaneous breathing after airway positioning OR
- Palpable pulse AND spontaneous breathing after 5 rescue breaths given
- Indications to triage to Expectant
- No respiratory effort after positioning airway AND
- No palpable pulse OR No spontaneous breathing after 5 rescue breaths
- Spontaneous Breathing
- Triage to Immediate, if Respiratory Rate <15/min or >45/min
- Assess pulse (see below) if Respiratory Rate 15-45/min
- No respiratory effort
- Assess Pulse
- Assess Neurologic Status
- See AVPU Scale
- Indications to Triage to Immediate
- Posturing (or other innapropriate response to pain, P) or
- Unresponsive (U)
- Indications to Triage to Delayed
- Alert (A) response or
- Verbal (V) response or
- Appropriate pain (P) response
VI. Reources
- JumpSTART Pediatric MCI Triage Tool (Dr. Lou Romig)
- DHS CHEMM JumpSTART Flowsheet
VII. References
- Seeyave and Bradin (2014) Crit Dec Emerg Med 28(12): 2-13
- Romig (2002) JEMS 27(7):52-63 [PubMed]