Reference — Fundamentals
SBAR Reference
Quick-reference guide to the SBAR communication framework — Situation, Background, Assessment, Recommendation. SBAR is the standardized clinical communication structure used for provider calls, rapid response escalation, and shift-to-shift handoff.
Educational use only. Always follow your facility's communication and chain-of-command policies. This reference is for nursing education and NCLEX preparation. 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.
SBAR Overview
SBAR provides a shared mental model for clinical communication — a predictable structure that ensures critical information is never omitted. It is used when nurses call providers, escalate concerns, or transfer care responsibility. Communication failures are a leading contributing factor in adverse patient events; SBAR directly addresses this risk.
Before calling: gather all relevant data, have the chart open, know the patient's code status, and anticipate questions the provider will ask.
Component Quick Reference
| Component | Definition | Include |
|---|---|---|
| S Situation | Who you are, who the patient is, and what is happening right now |
|
| B Background | Relevant clinical context needed to understand the current concern |
|
| A Assessment | The nurse's current clinical findings and impression of what may be occurring |
|
| R Recommendation | What the nurse is requesting or recommending — specific and actionable |
|
Example — Provider Call (Change in Condition)
Example — Shift Handoff Report
NCLEX Quick Tips
- SBAR order: Situation → Background → Assessment → Recommendation — memorize and apply in order
- Assessment includes the nurse's clinical impression — stating "I am concerned about..." is expected, not overstepping
- Always document the SBAR call: who was called, time, information given, orders received
- If the provider does not respond appropriately and you remain clinically concerned: escalate through the chain of command
- Telephone orders: read back the complete order before accepting and documenting
Related Resources
Standards & sources
Fact-checked Jun 21, 2026This page is written to align with American Nurses Association (ANA) Standards of Practice · The Joint Commission. 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 →
