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Apex Nursing

Chart — Emergency Nursing

ESI Triage Chart

Emergency Severity Index quick-reference chart — ESI levels 1 through 5 with patient severity, anticipated resource needs, example presentations, time-to-provider, and reassessment intervals.

Educational use only. This content is intended for nursing students and exam preparation. Always follow your institution's triage protocols. This material supports nursing education and exam review. It is not medical advice and is not a substitute for clinical judgment, institutional policy, or medical direction. Always follow facility protocols and current provider orders.

ESI LevelPatient SeverityResource NeedsExample PresentationReassessment
ESI 1

Immediate

Now — nurse acts before provider if needed

Life-threatening — requires immediate life-saving interventionUnlimited — resuscitative measures deployed at onceCardiac arrest; respiratory arrest; unresponsive trauma patient; active status epilepticus; apneic anaphylaxisContinuous
ESI 2

Emergent

<10 minutes

High-risk situation — may deteriorate rapidly without prompt evaluation; severe pain/distressAny number — complex workup anticipatedChest pain + diaphoresis (STEMI); FAST+ stroke symptoms; worst headache of life (SAH); fever + petechiae (child); suicidal patient with plan; septic shockEvery 15 min
ESI 3

Urgent

Varies by volume

Stable — not in immediate danger but needs multiple resources to evaluate and treat≥2 resources (e.g., labs + IV fluid + imaging)Abdominal pain (labs + CT + IV pain meds); UTI with fever (UA + IV antibiotics); chest pain needing ECG + troponin + CXREvery 30–60 min
ESI 4

Less Urgent

Non-urgent queue

Stable — likely requires only one resource; not expected to deteriorate1 resource only (X-ray only; UA only; wound closure only)Simple laceration (wound closure only); sprained ankle (X-ray only); ear pain + strep swab; UTI (no fever) + UA onlyEvery 1–2 hrs
ESI 5

Non-Urgent

Longest wait

Stable — no resources anticipated beyond physician examination0 resources (exam only)Mild URI (wants documentation); prescription refill only; minor rash without systemic symptoms; bug bite without infection signsEvery 2 hrs

What Counts as a Resource

  • Laboratory tests (blood, urine, wound culture)
  • IV or IM medications
  • IV fluid bolus (rehydration)
  • CT, X-ray, or ultrasound (each = 1 resource)
  • 12-lead ECG
  • Specialist consultation
  • Simple procedure (I&D, laceration repair)

Physician examination does NOT count as a resource.

Never Undertriage These Presentations

  • !STEMI — chest pain + diaphoresis + radiation → ESI 1 or 2
  • !Acute stroke (FAST+) — time is brain → ESI 2
  • !Thunderclap headache → ESI 2 (subarachnoid hemorrhage)
  • !Anaphylaxis with bronchospasm → ESI 1 or 2
  • !Septic shock (hypotension + infection) → ESI 1 or 2
  • !Pediatric fever + petechiae → ESI 2
  • !Active seizure → ESI 1
  • !Suicidal patient with plan and means → ESI 2

Retriage Rule

Any patient whose condition visibly worsens while waiting MUST be retried immediately — regardless of original ESI level. ESI 3 can deteriorate to ESI 1. The triage nurse is responsible for monitoring the waiting room at regular intervals.

Source: ESI Implementation Handbook, AHRQ/ACEP; Emergency Nurses Association (ENA)

Related Resources

Standards & sources

Fact-checked Jun 20, 2026

This page is written to align with ESI Implementation Handbook, AHRQ/ACEP; Emergency Nurses Association (ENA). It is an educational summary, not a citation of any single document — always verify specific doses, values, and protocols against current guidelines and your facility policy. How we source content →