A neonate has just been delivered on scene. The delivery went well but the newborn needs immediate assessment. Before the 1-minute mark passes, the crew needs the APGAR components selected and scored so resuscitation decisions are made on objective criteria.
APGAR = Appearance + Pulse + Grimace + Activity + Respiration
Interpretation: 7–10 = Normal · 4–6 = Moderately depressed · 0–3 = Severely depressedRepeat at 5 min if 1-min score <7. Repeat at 10 min if 5-min score <7.
1 What this calculator does
Calculates the APGAR score from five clinical criteria -- Appearance, Pulse, Grimace, Activity and Respiration -- each scored 0, 1 or 2. Shows total score out of 10 with the clinical classification and recommended action at 1 minute and 5 minutes.
2 Formula & professional reasoning
APGAR = Appearance + Pulse + Grimace + Activity + Respiration
Each component: 0 (absent/abnormal) | 1 (intermediate) | 2 (normal)
Scoring:
Appearance: 0=blue/pale all over | 1=body pink, extremities blue | 2=pink all over
Pulse: 0=absent | 1=<100 bpm | 2=>=100 bpm
Grimace: 0=no response | 1=grimace | 2=cry/sneeze/cough
Activity: 0=limp | 1=some flexion | 2=active motion
Respiration: 0=absent | 1=weak/irregular | 2=strong cry
Score 0-3: severe depression | 4-6: moderate depression | 7-10: normal
The APGAR score provides a standardised, rapid assessment of newborn condition immediately after delivery. Each of the five criteria reflects a different aspect of cardiorespiratory and neurological function. Pulse rate is the most critical single indicator -- a heart rate below 100 bpm is the primary trigger for resuscitation in the newborn. The score is assessed at 1 minute (reflects condition at birth) and 5 minutes (reflects response to initial interventions). A persistent score below 7 at 5 minutes warrants further assessment and intervention.
3 Worked examples
⚠️ Illustrative example only — not clinical or professional instruction.
Total: 1 + 2 + 2 + 2 + 2 = 9 / 10Total: 1 + 1 + 1 + 1 + 1 = 5 / 10Total: 0 + 0 + 0 + 0 + 0 = 0 / 104 Sanity check
5 Common errors
| Error | Cause | Consequence | Fix |
|---|---|---|---|
| Delaying resuscitation to complete the full APGAR score | Treating score calculation as a prerequisite for intervention | Critical delay in PPV or chest compressions -- increases risk of hypoxic injury | Resuscitation decisions are based on immediate assessment of breathing, heart rate and colour -- not on the APGAR total. Calculate and document the score concurrently with interventions, not before them. |
| Not re-assessing at 5 minutes after a low 1-minute score | Focusing on the initial score without planned reassessment | Response to interventions not captured -- deterioration or improvement missed | The 5-minute APGAR is as important as the 1-minute score. If the 1-minute score is below 7, ensure a 5-minute reassessment is planned and documented. Persistent low scores at 5 minutes indicate more significant compromise. |
| Scoring Appearance as 2 (fully pink) in the first 1-3 minutes of life | Not recognising that peripheral cyanosis (acrocyanosis) is normal in the first minutes | Appearance score of 1 is misinterpreted as a problem when it is a normal finding | Acrocyanosis (blue extremities with pink body) in the first 1-3 minutes of life is normal. Score Appearance as 1 in this case, not 0. A score of 0 is reserved for central cyanosis (blue body and face) or pallor throughout. |
| Not time-stamping the APGAR assessment from the time of delivery | Starting the timer from when resuscitation began rather than from delivery | Inaccurate documentation -- 1-minute score reflects a later time point | The 1-minute APGAR is assessed 60 seconds from the time of delivery, not from the time the clinician began their assessment. Document delivery time precisely and calculate APGAR assessment times from that point. |
6 Reference & regulatory links
7 Professional workflow
Common tools used alongside this one: