Classification
First responders using START evaluate victims and assign them to one of the following four categories: * Deceased/expectant (black) * Immediate (red) * Delayed (yellow) * Walking wounded/minor (green) Lerner EB, Schwartz RB, Coule PL, et al. "Mass Casualty Triage: An Evaluation of the Data and Development of a Proposed National Guideline." ''Disaster Medicine and Public Health Preparedness'' 2(Suppl. 1) 2008, pp S25-S34. The colors correspond toTreatment and evacuation
After all patients have been evaluated, responders use the START classifications to determine priorities for treatment or evacuation to a hospital. The most basic way to use the START classifications is to transport victims in a fixed priority manner: immediate victims, followed by delayed victims, followed by the walking wounded. More detailed secondary triage systems such as SAVE may also be used: in this case, the START classifications are used to determine the order in which victims should undergo secondary triage. START is not a system for determining resource allocation. The classification algorithm used in START does not depend on the number of victims or on the number of resources available to treat them, nor does using START alone provide any prioritization of patients within any of the four triage classes. Therefore, significant differences in implementation of treatment and evacuation may exist across different agencies using START.Navin M, Sacco W, and Waddell R. ''Operational Comparison of the Simple Triage and Rapid Treatment Method and the Sacco Triage Method in Mass Casualty Exercises''. Journal of Trauma Vol. 69 No. 1 July 2010 pp.215-225. http://journals.lww.com/jtrauma/pages/default.aspxModifications to START and similar triage systems
Numerous agencies have developed modifications to START or new triage systems similar to START. One early proposed modification substituted the presence of a radial pulse for capillary refill in classifying patients as immediate. The Fire Department of New York uses a modified version of START with an orange or "urgent" classification intermediate in severity between immediate and delayed.Modification for pediatric patients
START has also been modified to provide better treatment for children. One such modification is known as JumpSTART. There are several simple modifications to the adult version. The primary modification for use with pediatric patients is to change the "normal" respiratory rate: since children breathe faster than adults, JumpSTART assigns the immediate classification on the basis of respiratory rate only if the child's respiration is under 15 or over 45 per minute. Another change is in theSimilar triage systems
Other triage systems that are variations of or similar to START include Triage Sieve, Pediatric Triage Tape, and CareFlite Triage. Each of these systems uses four or five triage classes with the red, yellow, green, and black colors.Limitations
There is no accepted measure to judge the appropriateness of any given system in mass casualty triage. Like many other triage systems, START suffers from implementation problems such as substantial amounts of overtriage. Frykberg ER. "Triage: Principles and Practice." ''Scandinavian Journal of Surgery'' 94, 2005, pp 272-278 One of the major strengths of START, its simplicity, is also a major limitation. Since START was developed, consensus has emerged that triage should be more sophisticated, by incorporating resource limitations and capacity in determining how to prioritize patients.Lerner EB, Cone DC, Weinstein ES. "Mass Casualty Triage: An Evaluation of the Science and Refinement of a National Guideline." ''Disaster Medicine and Public Health Preparedness'' 5, 2011, pp 129-137.Argon NT, Ziya S, Winslow JE. "Triage in the Aftermath of Mass-Casualty Incidents." ''Wiley Encyclopedia of Operations Research and Management Science.'' John Wiley & Sons, 2011 doi:10.1002/9780470400531.eorms0925See also
* First responders * RPM-30-2-Can Do ( mnemonic for START triage criteria)Notes
External links
* (Newport Beach Fire Department) * * * (PDF - 197 KB) (Adult, SC-EMS.com) * * Maryland Institute for Emergency Medical Service Systems {{cite web, url=http://www.miemss.org/home/TriageTagTraining/tabid/152/Default.aspx, title=Simple Triage and Rapid Treatment training, archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130903224414/http://www.miemss.org/home/TriageTagTraining/tabid/152/Default.aspx, archive-date=2013-09-03 Triage