Skip to calculator
Haemodynamics Free · No login

Shock Index

Shock index from heart rate and systolic BP. Flags haemorrhagic shock risk. Free prehospital calculator for shock index. ARC and AHA guidelines.

❤️
🎯

A trauma patient is on scene after a high-speed MVC. Vitals are HR 118 bpm and SBP 102 mmHg. Before calling a trauma alert and initiating transport, the crew needs the shock index calculated to quantify haemodynamic instability and support the decision.

Shock Index
Haemodynamics
Shock Index = Heart Rate ÷ Systolic BP Ranges: <0.6 Normal · 0.6–1.0 Monitor · 1.0–1.4 Haemorrhagic shock likely · ≥1.4 Critical
Normal SI in adults is 0.5–0.7. SI >1.0 is associated with significantly increased mortality.
💡 SI is a rapid bedside screening tool — always assess in conjunction with full clinical picture.
⚕️ Clinical safety: 🇦🇺 Verify with facility drug formulary and senior clinician · Meets AHPRA/ACSQHC standards

1 What this calculator does

Calculates the Shock Index (SI) from heart rate and systolic blood pressure. Classifies haemodynamic status from normal to critical haemorrhage and provides a recommended prehospital action for each threshold. Useful for early identification of occult shock when BP appears borderline normal.

2 Formula & professional reasoning

Shock Index = Heart rate (bpm) / Systolic BP (mmHg) Thresholds: SI <0.6: Normal -- haemodynamically stable SI 0.6-0.9: Mildly elevated -- monitor, early haemorrhage or pain response SI 1.0-1.3: Moderately elevated -- haemorrhagic shock likely, IV access + fluid SI >=1.4: Severely elevated -- critical haemorrhage, immediate transport + massive haemorrhage protocol

The Shock Index inversely reflects cardiac output relative to compensatory tachycardia. Normally the heart rate is significantly lower than the systolic BP, giving an SI below 1.0. As haemorrhage develops, the heart rate rises and the BP falls -- the ratio crosses 1.0 when tachycardia no longer maintains adequate pressure, indicating significant blood loss (typically >750-1000 mL in an adult). The SI is particularly useful in the 'golden hour' because it can identify patients in compensated shock who have a normal-appearing SBP due to vasoconstriction. An SI of 1.0 or above in a trauma patient should trigger immediate IV access and expedited transport regardless of the absolute BP value.

3 Worked examples

⚠️ Illustrative example only — not clinical or professional instruction.

Basic
Normal shock index -- haemodynamically stable
Given: HR: 85 bpm | SBP: 120 mmHg
Working: SI = 85 / 120 = 0.71
Answer: Shock Index: 0.71 -- Mildly elevated. Monitor closely. May reflect pain response or early haemorrhage.
💡 Illustrative example only. Verify all clinical decisions with your agency protocol, medical director and partner clinician. Meets AHPRA/ACSQHC prehospital care standards. SI 0.71 is in the mildly elevated range. In a trauma patient, this warrants close monitoring and reassessment every 5 minutes. A rising SI on serial measurements is more concerning than a single value.
Standard
Shock index at 1.0 threshold -- haemorrhagic shock
Given: HR: 118 bpm | SBP: 102 mmHg
Working: SI = 118 / 102 = 1.157
Answer: Shock Index: 1.16 -- Moderately elevated. Haemorrhagic shock likely. IV access, cautious fluid resuscitation, expedite transport.
💡 Illustrative example only. Verify all clinical decisions with your agency protocol, medical director and partner clinician. Meets AHPRA/ACSQHC prehospital care standards. An SBP of 102 mmHg appears borderline acceptable in isolation, but the SI of 1.16 reveals significant haemodynamic compromise. This patient is likely in compensated haemorrhagic shock. Initiate 2 large-bore IV lines, permissive hypotension strategy (target SBP 80-90 mmHg in penetrating trauma), and trauma team pre-notification.
Advanced
Critical haemorrhage -- SI above 1.4
Given: HR: 140 bpm | SBP: 90 mmHg
Working: SI = 140 / 90 = 1.556
Answer: Shock Index: 1.56 -- Severely elevated. Critical haemorrhage. Immediate transport. Massive haemorrhage protocol. Trauma team activation.
💡 Illustrative example only. Verify all clinical decisions with your agency protocol, medical director and partner clinician. Meets AHPRA/ACSQHC prehospital care standards. SI above 1.4 is associated with haemodynamic instability requiring surgical intervention. Minimise scene time, activate trauma team en route, consider TXA administration per protocol, and maintain target SBP per local permissive hypotension guidelines. Do not delay transport for fluid resuscitation beyond 2 attempts at IV access.

4 Sanity check

Shock Index thresholds
Normal <0.6 | Mildly elevated 0.6-0.9 | Haemorrhagic shock likely 1.0-1.3 | Critical >=1.4
Some sources use a threshold of 0.9 as the upper limit of normal for adults.
SI limitations in specific populations
Elderly patients: may not mount a tachycardia -- lower SI may still indicate significant haemorrhage | Beta-blockers: blunt tachycardia response -- SI may underestimate haemorrhage | Pregnancy: normal HR is higher, SBP lower -- adjusted thresholds apply
Serial measurements more useful than a single value
A rising SI on serial 5-minute measurements is more clinically significant than a single elevated value | Trend over time guides resuscitation response
SI does not replace clinical assessment
Skin colour, capillary refill, level of consciousness and mechanism of injury all inform the haemorrhage assessment alongside the SI

5 Common errors

ErrorCauseConsequenceFix
Treating a normal-appearing SBP as reassuring when the HR is elevated Focusing on the SBP in isolation without calculating the SI Missing compensated shock -- the patient deteriorates rapidly once compensatory mechanisms fail Calculate the SI for every significant trauma patient. An SBP of 100 mmHg with an HR of 110 bpm (SI 1.1) is a very different clinical picture from an SBP of 100 with an HR of 70 (SI 0.7). The SI reveals the relationship between the two values.
Not recalculating the SI after interventions or during transport Calculating once and not repeating Missing deterioration or improvement in haemodynamic status during transport Recalculate the SI every 5 minutes in an unstable trauma patient. A rising SI despite fluid administration suggests ongoing haemorrhage. A falling SI suggests the patient is responding to resuscitation.
Applying standard SI thresholds to elderly patients on beta-blockers Not adjusting for medications that blunt the tachycardia response Underestimating haemorrhage -- beta-blockers prevent the heart rate from rising, maintaining a falsely reassuring SI In patients taking beta-blockers, a 'normal' or mildly elevated SI may still represent significant haemorrhage. Combine SI with clinical assessment of skin perfusion, mental status, capillary refill and mechanism of injury.
Using the shock index as the sole criterion for a trauma team activation Mechanistically applying a threshold without clinical synthesis Under- or over-triaging based on a single calculated parameter SI is a support tool for decision-making alongside mechanism of injury, anatomical injury patterns, physiological trends and clinical assessment. Pre-notification decisions should integrate all available information.