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Revised Trauma Score (RTS)

Revised Trauma Score from GCS, systolic BP and respiratory rate for priage and survival prediction. Free prehospital calculator for revised trauma score (rts). AR...

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Multi-vehicle collision, two patients. You need to triage priority in 90 seconds before the second ambulance arrives.

Revised Trauma Score (RTS)
Trauma
RTS = (0.9368×GCS) + (0.7326×SBP) + (0.2908×RR) Maximum score = 7.84 (minor injury) · RTS <4 → trauma centre activation
Field Triage: RTS ≤11 (unweighted) → consider transport to trauma centre.
⚕️ Clinical safety: 🇦🇺 Verify with facility drug formulary and senior clinician · Meets AHPRA/ACSQHC standards

1 What this calculator does

Calculates the Revised Trauma Score (RTS) from Glasgow Coma Scale, systolic blood pressure and respiratory rate. Generates a physiological triage score for trauma severity and predicted survival. Higher scores indicate better physiological status.

2 Formula & professional reasoning

RTS = (0.9368 × GCS coded) + (0.7326 × SBP coded) + (0.2908 × RR coded) | Range: 0–7.84

Each parameter is converted to a coded value (0–4) based on clinical thresholds. The weighted formula was derived by Champion et al. from the Major Trauma Outcome Study. An RTS below 4 indicates a severely injured patient with poor predicted survival and identifies those who should be triaged to the highest level trauma centre. The coded (unweighted) sum is used for field triage under START protocols.

3 Worked examples

⚠️ Illustrative example only — not clinical or professional instruction.

Basic
Minor trauma — walking wounded
Given: GCS 15 (coded 4), SBP 130 (coded 4), RR 16 (coded 4)
Working: (0.9368×4)+(0.7326×4)+(0.2908×4) = 3.747+2.930+1.163
Answer: RTS 7.84 — Minimal injury
💡 Field triage: Green. Physiologically normal. Monitor for deterioration.
Standard
Significant head injury
Given: GCS 10 (coded 3), SBP 110 (coded 4), RR 20 (coded 4)
Working: (0.9368×3)+(0.7326×4)+(0.2908×4) = 2.810+2.930+1.163
Answer: RTS 6.90 — Moderate injury
💡 Field triage: Yellow or Red depending on mechanism. Pre-alert trauma team.
Advanced
Critical poly-trauma
Given: GCS 6 (coded 2), SBP 80 (coded 2), RR 6 (coded 1)
Working: (0.9368×2)+(0.7326×2)+(0.2908×1) = 1.874+1.465+0.291
Answer: RTS 3.63 — Critical — highest triage priority
💡 RTS <4: major trauma centre mandatory. Predicted survival ~36%. Immediate transport, pre-alert.

4 Sanity check

RTS 7.84
Physiologically normal — minor triage
All parameters optimal.
RTS 5–7
Moderate injury — urgent
Pre-alert receiving hospital. Trauma team activation likely needed.
RTS 4–5
Severe — major trauma centre
Predicted survival 60–80%. Activate highest level trauma protocol.
RTS < 4
Critical — immediate highest priority
Predicted survival under 50%. Direct to major trauma centre. Bypass closer facilities.

5 Common errors

ErrorCauseConsequenceFix
Using raw GCS not coded value Entering 15 instead of coded 4 RTS calculation completely wrong The calculator applies coding automatically — enter the raw GCS, SBP and RR values
Measuring SBP after fluid bolus Pre-hospital intervention changes physiology Score under-estimates injury severity Record and document the first-contact physiological values — before any intervention
Ignoring RTS when patient is talking Verbal reassurance reduces perceived urgency Significant internal injuries missed A talking patient can still have an RTS below 6 if tachycardic and tachypnoeic
Using RTS as sole triage tool Over-reliance on a single score Anatomical injuries missed (penetrating, tension pneumo) RTS supplements clinical judgement and anatomical assessment — not a replacement