What is the beginning?

Simple sorting and quick treatment (START) is a form of sorting usually used in the US in emergency or catastrophic scenes for rapid evaluation and providing proper help to those on the scene. The beginning of sorting is a form of simple sorting in which injuries are analyzed to determine their medical needs, and then assigned the priority of treatment based on these needs. It is a standardized system that can be easily remembered and used by emergency doctors, as well as non -medical emergency staff. The start of sorting uses four simple categories for priority: immediate care, delayed care, minor injuries and deceased.

While sorting is similar to other forms of simple sorting, it is a specific methodology that has been standardized and can be easily remembered, followed by emergency workers. Like other forms of sorting, it consists of a system that can be injured by people on the site of disaster or emergency situations analyzed and assigned by a priorityfor treatment. The triage start system was developed by Hoag Hospital and the Newport Beach fire brigade in Newport Beach, California. It was designed as a form of sorting that could be quickly used in an emergency such as an earthquake.

start sorting begins with rapid analysis of people at a disaster or emergency. This should take less than one minute and the first respondents on such a scene are instructed to make sorting before providing any medical assistance. If assistance is provided to individuals before fully employing sorting, then those who need most can be ignored in favor of those who were found first. Start sorting also uses the concept of the "golden clock", suggesting that seriously injuries people in an emergency will be more likely to survive if they have proper treatment and support of life in the first hour.

Using the start of sorting begins with an an analysis of the injuredpeople; "Walking injured" who need little help have the lowest priority. Those who do not breathe are further evaluated. If the effort to open the airways is successful and begins to breathe, they are preferred for immediate care, if such an effort fails, then they are considered deceased. People who breathe but breathe very quickly or lack radial pulse, usually have immediate priority. Those who have a radial pulse but who cannot watch simple commands are also preferred for immediate care, while those who can watch simple commands will receive a priority of delayed care.

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