curability$18133$ - traduction vers allemand
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curability$18133$ - traduction vers allemand

DETERMINING THE PRIORITY OF PATIENTS' TREATMENTS BASED ON THE SEVERITY OF THEIR CONDITION
Mass triage; Manchester triage; Reverse triage; Triage sieve; Canadian Triage and Acuity Scale; Australasian Triage Scale; Triage nurse; Manchester Triage System; Curability; Triage (Medicine); Triage (medicine)
  • Glasgow Coma Score]]; Tp: temperature. Abnormal vital signs are strong predictors for intensive care unit admission and in-hospital mortality in adults triaged in the emergency department.
  • Emergency Triage (E/T) Lights – particularly useful at night or under adverse conditions
  • Many triage systems use triage tags with specific formats
  • A triage sign at a Mexican emergency department indicating the waiting time for patients based on the severity of their condition
  • Triage station, [[Suippes]], France, [[World War I]]

curability      
adj. heilbar

Définition

triage
Triage is the process of quickly examining sick or injured people, for example after an accident or a battle, so that those who are in the most serious condition can be treated first. (MEDICAL)
...the triage process.
N-UNCOUNT: oft N n

Wikipédia

Triage

In medicine, triage () is a practice invoked when acute care cannot be provided due to a lack of resources. The process rations care towards those who are most in need of immediate care, and who will benefit most from it. More generally it refers to prioritisation of medical care as a whole. In its acute form it is most often required on the battlefield, during a pandemic, or at peacetime when an accident results in a mass casualty which swamps nearby healthcare facilities' capacity.

Triage always follows the modern interpretation of the Hippocratic oath, but otherwise there is plenty of leeway in interpretation, leading to more than one simultaneous idea of its nature. The best-settled theories and practical scoring systems used come from the area of acute physical trauma in an emergency room setting; a broken bone obviously counts for less than uncontrolled arterial bleeding, which is likely to lead to death. But no current principle carries over well to mental health, reproductive health (such as abortion), chronic medical conditions, geriatrics, or palliative care (including euthanasia). This is because triage needs to balance multiple and sometimes contradictory objectives simultaneously, most of them being fundamental to personhood: likelihood of death, efficacy of treatment, patients' remaining lifespan, ethics and religion.