A patient with known COPD is on high-flow oxygen at 15 L/min (FiO2 approximately 60%) and the SpO2 reads 92%. Before deciding whether to escalate to CPAP or BVM assist, the crew needs the S/F ratio to classify the severity of hypoxaemia against ARDS criteria.
S/F Ratio = SpO₂ ÷ FiO₂ (as decimal)
FiO₂ guide: Room air 21% · Nasal cannula 1L=24%, 2L=28%, 4L=36%, 6L=44% · Simple mask ~40% · NRB mask ~60–80% · BVM 100%S/F thresholds (ARDS Berlin): ≥315 Normal · 235–314 Mild · 148–234 Moderate · <148 Severe
1 What this calculator does
Calculates the SpO2/FiO2 (S/F) ratio, an approximation of the PaO2/FiO2 (P/F) ratio used for ARDS classification. Classifies oxygenation status from normal to severe hypoxaemia and provides recommended prehospital interventions for each threshold.
2 Formula & professional reasoning
S/F ratio = SpO2 (%) / (FiO2 as a decimal)
FiO2 reference:
Room air: 21% | Low-flow 2L: ~28% | Low-flow 4L: ~36% | High-flow 15L: ~60%
Simple face mask: ~40-60% | Non-rebreather mask 15L: ~80-95% | Intubated/BVM 100%: 100%
S/F thresholds:
>=315: Normal oxygenation
235-314: Mild hypoxaemia (ARDS mild equivalent)
148-234: Moderate hypoxaemia
<148: Severe hypoxaemia
The S/F ratio is a non-invasive surrogate for the PaO2/FiO2 (P/F) ratio used in the Berlin ARDS definition, because SpO2 can be measured non-invasively in the prehospital setting while PaO2 requires arterial blood gas sampling. Rice et al (2007) established a correlation between S/F and P/F ratios, with S/F thresholds of 315, 235 and 148 corresponding to P/F thresholds of 300, 200 and 100 (mild, moderate and severe ARDS). This allows prehospital clinicians to estimate ARDS severity and escalate airway support appropriately before arterial blood gas results are available.
3 Worked examples
⚠️ Illustrative example only — not clinical or professional instruction.
FiO2 as decimal: 80/100 = 0.80 | S/F ratio: 92/0.80 = 115S/F ratio: 98/0.85 = 115.3FiO2 as decimal: 21/100 = 0.21 | S/F ratio: 98/0.21 = 466.74 Sanity check
5 Common errors
| Error | Cause | Consequence | Fix |
|---|---|---|---|
| Using SpO2 alone without calculating the FiO2 requirement to assess oxygenation | Treating SpO2 as the only oxygenation metric | Missing significant gas exchange impairment -- an SpO2 of 96% on 80% FiO2 is far more concerning than 96% on room air | Always consider SpO2 in the context of the FiO2 being delivered. An SpO2 that requires high FiO2 to maintain indicates impaired gas exchange that SpO2 alone does not reveal. |
| Using carbon monoxide poisoning patients' SpO2 for S/F calculation | Not recognising that pulse oximetry cannot distinguish oxyhaemoglobin from carboxyhaemoglobin | Falsely reassuring SpO2 leads to underestimation of hypoxia severity | In suspected CO poisoning, SpO2 is unreliable -- the oximeter reads COHb as oxyhaemoglobin, giving falsely normal readings. Use clinical signs and CO-oximetry if available. The S/F ratio is not valid in CO poisoning. |
| Applying ARDS criteria to a non-ARDS cause of hypoxaemia without context | Using S/F thresholds as definitive diagnoses rather than severity classifiers | Inappropriate escalation or de-escalation decisions based on a single ratio | The S/F ratio classifies severity of hypoxaemia -- it does not identify the cause. The treatment of hypoxaemia depends on the underlying cause (pneumonia, pulmonary oedema, bronchospasm, PE) as well as severity. Integrate the S/F with the clinical presentation. |
| Not accounting for the unreliability of SpO2 in poor peripheral perfusion | Accepting an SpO2 reading without checking the plethysmographic waveform quality | Inaccurate SpO2 used for S/F calculation -- may be much lower or higher than actual | Only use SpO2 readings with a good-quality plethysmographic waveform. In shock or poor perfusion, move the probe to a more central location (ear lobe, forehead sensor) or interpret SpO2 readings with significant caution. |
6 Reference & regulatory links
7 Professional workflow
Common tools used alongside this one: