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Triage

Triage is the process of prioritizing treatment or attention when resources are limited, with the aim of doing the greatest good for the greatest number. The word comes from the French trier, meaning to sort. The concept originated on the battlefield; Baron Dominique-Jean Larrey, a surgeon in Napoleon Bonaparte’s army, organized wounded soldiers by urgency to maximize survival. Since then, triage has become a core principle in emergency medicine, disaster response, and humanitarian aid, and is applied in civil, military, and veterinary contexts.

In medical and field settings, triage involves a rapid assessment to classify patients by the urgency of

Beyond medicine, triage applies to any situation where demand exceeds capacity, including disaster management, public health,

their
need
for
care
and
their
likelihood
of
benefit
from
treatment.
Commonly,
patients
are
grouped
into
categories
such
as
those
requiring
immediate
attention,
those
whose
treatment
can
be
delayed
briefly,
those
with
minor
injuries,
and,
in
some
systems,
those
who
are
unlikely
to
survive
despite
treatment.
Color-coded
tagging
systems
are
often
used,
with
red
for
immediate,
yellow
for
delayed,
green
for
minor,
and
black
for
expectant
or
deceased.
Triage
is
designed
to
be
dynamic;
reassessment
and
re-triage
are
integral
as
patients’
conditions
evolve
and
resources
change.
Tools
such
as
Simple
Triage
and
Rapid
Treatment
(START)
and
other
frameworks
like
SALT
have
been
developed
to
standardize
practice.
and
resource
allocation
in
emergencies.
Ethical
considerations
emphasize
fairness,
avoidance
of
discrimination,
and
respect
for
patient
autonomy
where
possible,
while
acknowledging
the
need
to
balance
individual
care
with
broader
community
outcomes.
Limitations
include
the
potential
for
misclassification
and
the
fluid
nature
of
emergencies,
which
require
ongoing
reassessment
and
adaptation.