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Glasgow Coma Scale (GCS)

Total GCS score with severity classification. Select best response for Eye, Verbal and Motor components. Free nursing calculator for glasgow coma scale (gcs). AU ...

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Post-operative patient, slight change in behaviour noted on handover. You need a documented baseline GCS before the neurologist arrives.

Glasgow Coma Scale (GCS)
Assessment
GCS = Eye (1–4) + Verbal (1–5) + Motor (1–6) Severity classification:
15 = Normal · 13–14 = Minor · 9–12 = Moderate · ≤8 = Severe (airway risk)
💡 GCS ≤8 — "patient is not great" — intubation threshold. Always escalate immediately and document time of assessment.
⚕️ Clinical safety: 🇦🇺 Verify with facility drug formulary and senior clinician · Meets AHPRA/ACSQHC standards

1 What this calculator does

Calculates the total Glasgow Coma Scale score from the three components — Eye opening (E), Verbal response (V) and Motor response (M). Classifies severity and flags the critical threshold of 8 or below.

2 Formula & professional reasoning

GCS Total = Eye (1–4) + Verbal (1–5) + Motor (1–6) | Range: 3–15

The GCS was developed by Teasdale and Jennett (1974) as a standardised way to assess conscious level. Each component scores independently — motor response is the strongest predictor of outcome. A total of ≤8 indicates severe brain injury and is the widely-used threshold for airway intervention.

3 Worked examples

⚠️ Illustrative example only — not clinical or professional instruction.

Basic
Alert patient
Given: E4 (spontaneous) · V5 (oriented) · M6 (obeys commands)
Working: 4 + 5 + 6 = 15
Answer: GCS 15 — Normal
💡 Document as E4V5M6 in the notes, not just the total.
Standard
Post-ictal patient
Given: E3 (to voice) · V3 (words only) · M5 (localises)
Working: 3 + 3 + 5 = 11
Answer: GCS 11 — Moderate
💡 Reassess every 15 minutes. Any downward trend needs escalation.
Advanced
Severe TBI
Given: E2 (to pressure) · V1 (none) · M3 (abnormal flexion)
Working: 2 + 1 + 3 = 6
Answer: GCS 6 — Severe ⚠️
💡 GCS ≤8 — intubation threshold. Escalate immediately. Airway management priority.

4 Sanity check

GCS 15
Normal consciousness
Still document — baseline is critical for trend monitoring.
GCS 13–14
Minor injury
Close neurological observation. Reassess frequently.
GCS 9–12
Moderate impairment
Urgent medical review required.
GCS ≤8
Severe — protect airway
Intubation threshold. MET/RRT activation. Continuous monitoring.

5 Common errors

ErrorCauseConsequenceFix
Recording total only Skipping component documentation Trend changes missed — E2V2M4 vs E4V2M2 both = 8 but very different Always document as E_V_M_ not just the total
Applying 'NT' (not testable) Patient intubated or aphasic Score underestimated without noting reason Document as E_VTM_ where T = intubated; use 1T for verbal component
Scoring best response incorrectly Assessing average not best Artificially low score Always score the BEST response observed — use painful stimulus if needed
Confusing flexion types Normal vs abnormal flexion look similar M4 vs M3 distinction missed — critical difference Normal flexion = withdrawal with wrist flexion; abnormal = stereotyped decorticate posture

7 Professional workflow

Common tools used alongside this one: