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词汇 triage
释义

Definition of triage in English:

triage

noun ˈtriːɑːʒtriˈɑʒ
mass noun
  • 1(in medical use) the assignment of degrees of urgency to wounds or illnesses to decide the order of treatment of a large number of patients or casualties.

    伤病员鉴别分类

    as modifier a triage nurse
    Example sentencesExamples
    • We would rather do triage right over the patient then sit down and put something together that we'll just end up revisiting in a few days.
    • The triage nurse said, ‘Now watch how I apply the Manchester triage system to this patient.’
    • Nurses undertaking triage assessments by telephone with computer decision support may reduce the number of visits to general practitioners, hospital use, and costs.
    • As soon as this triage was complete, treatment began.
    • It needs to be restructured by giving funding to provide triage nurses in local centres, a structure that better serves the different health culture and the more rural areas of Scotland.
    • On site management includes first aid, patient triage, and ambulance staging with a basic aim of maximal use of resources.
    • Do alternative methods exist for diagnosing heart failure or enabling appropriate triage of patients for echocardiography?
    • It will be used to calculate unit radiation status and to perform medical triage and assist in unit reconstitution.
    • However, when triage nurses became involved 80% of patients were treated correctly.
    • The triage nurses inside the homeless shelter had already initiated a referral form for a surgery consultation prior to sending the young man to the mobile clinic.
    1. 1.1 The process of determining the most important people or things from amongst a large number that require attention.
      a system of educational triage that allows a few students to get help while the needs of others are neglected
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Meanwhile, liberals are engaged in a constant process of triage, picking and choosing only the most important fights, and waiving the rest.
      • Is there a scheme of moral triage that would sort out this activity on behalf of a responsible, civilised society?
      • We use today's machine-translation systems for document triage and for filtering written materials for further study by human translators.
      • An infosec ‘consultant’ goes through a short triage, and either sends the project for more evaluation or gives it a green light if the security risk is minimal.
      • The plight of the world's endangered species is now so extreme that some are suggesting a system of triage: dividing species into one of three groups.
      • Using a sort of corporate triage, they form teams with the company's own employees to diagnose weaknesses and prescribe a strategy to preserve cash and restructure the business.
      • Criminal aliens also interpret the triage as indifference.
      • As a result, the programs are being more widely disseminated, and there are plans for a pilot project that will combine the three approaches in a triage model for youth entering the system.
      • It's a question of them doing a triage with the most important papers they are trying to affect and those reporters with whom they get along best.
      • Any good quality triage is swamped by the flood of poor decisions and technical foul-ups.
      • Is the administration actually doing the environment a favor by performing budget triage, funneling the most money to the neediest sites?
      • A close cousin to the complete overhaul is a triage approach, in which you stop new development temporarily and remedy only the most heinous problems.
      • How could such a global triage be executed justly?
      • Nine measurement points were used after the introduction of triage to allow multiple cross sectional comparisons of data during the sequential inclusion of the sites into the study.
      • This means I have to haul stuff upstairs, sort through the boxes, and perform triage.
      • First is the triage team, called that because it sorts claims by type and destination.
verbˈtriːɑːʒtriˈɑʒ
[with object]
  • Decide the order of treatment of (patients or casualties)

    确定(众多病人或伤者)的治疗顺序

    victims were triaged by paramedics before being transported to hospitals

    受难者在被送往医院之前,先由医护人员确定治疗顺序。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Patients would be triaged, and the seriously ill admitted to hospitals for treatment.
    • Once triaged, the casualty can be moved into the treatment tent for treatment by a physician.
    • The first step toward triaging decisions should be for company managers to imagine themselves in the place of the company's various stakeholders - beginning with employees.
    • Parlier, the most experienced, triaged the patients on the fantail in the order they needed to be evacuated - the most serious first - and passed them forward on the starboard side to Doc Moser.
    • Patients are triaged on the basis of medical history, a validated clinical prediction rule, and reported daytime sleepiness.
    • Individual nurses triaged patients across all three sites.
    • They were all triaged and removed to waiting buses to be taken to the terminal.
    • Both casualties were triaged and admitted to the HDU for overnight care.
    • Instead, patients are triaged and evaluated in the ER, and only then is the cath lab team called in to the hospital.
    • The hope has been, and had been for some time, that an improved use of software and triaging facilities would improve the non-response rate.
    • We treat everyone as equal and patients are triaged according to clinical need.
    • The women who were more likely to be triaged to revascularization (driven by high-risk anatomy), had a higher mortality risk.
    • And there was chaos there for a little while, as everyone just tried to figure out what was going on, and we started triaging the victims.
    • These protein markers have been used to monitor therapy, detect recurrences and triage patients for intensive treatment protocols.
    • ‘Treatment with antidepressant, in a sense, triages patients with primary affective disorders to a different path’.
    • As the evidence for the efficacy of gastric lavage and activated charcoal is only for its use within an hour, it is important that such patients are triaged rapidly.
    • This anesthesia care provider would assist in triaging patients and coordinating the flow of patients throughout the perioperative area.
    • It is probably best addressed by triaging patients based on their CXR.
    • From this point, litter bearers transported the patient to the battalion aid station where the medical officer triaged the patient and delivered additional emergency care.
    • Patients with less acute injuries may be triaged to an outpatient surgery center, or a surgery center may be asked to take overflow patients from acute care hospitals.

Origin

Early 18th century (in the sense 'the action of sorting items according to quality'): from French, from trier 'separate out'. The current sense dates from the 1930s, from the military system of assessing the wounded on the battlefield.

  • This is an English use of a French word, from trier ‘separate out’. The medical sense dates from the 1930s, from the military system of assessing the wounded on the battle field.

Definition of triage in US English:

triage

nountrēˈäZHtriˈɑʒ
  • 1(in medical use) the assignment of degrees of urgency to wounds or illnesses to decide the order of treatment of a large number of patients or casualties.

    伤病员鉴别分类

    as modifier a triage nurse
    Example sentencesExamples
    • Nurses undertaking triage assessments by telephone with computer decision support may reduce the number of visits to general practitioners, hospital use, and costs.
    • It needs to be restructured by giving funding to provide triage nurses in local centres, a structure that better serves the different health culture and the more rural areas of Scotland.
    • As soon as this triage was complete, treatment began.
    • The triage nurses inside the homeless shelter had already initiated a referral form for a surgery consultation prior to sending the young man to the mobile clinic.
    • However, when triage nurses became involved 80% of patients were treated correctly.
    • We would rather do triage right over the patient then sit down and put something together that we'll just end up revisiting in a few days.
    • The triage nurse said, ‘Now watch how I apply the Manchester triage system to this patient.’
    • Do alternative methods exist for diagnosing heart failure or enabling appropriate triage of patients for echocardiography?
    • It will be used to calculate unit radiation status and to perform medical triage and assist in unit reconstitution.
    • On site management includes first aid, patient triage, and ambulance staging with a basic aim of maximal use of resources.
    1. 1.1 The process of determining the most important people or things from amongst a large number that require attention.
      a system of educational triage that allows a few students to get help while the needs of others are neglected
      Example sentencesExamples
      • How could such a global triage be executed justly?
      • First is the triage team, called that because it sorts claims by type and destination.
      • The plight of the world's endangered species is now so extreme that some are suggesting a system of triage: dividing species into one of three groups.
      • Any good quality triage is swamped by the flood of poor decisions and technical foul-ups.
      • Meanwhile, liberals are engaged in a constant process of triage, picking and choosing only the most important fights, and waiving the rest.
      • We use today's machine-translation systems for document triage and for filtering written materials for further study by human translators.
      • Is there a scheme of moral triage that would sort out this activity on behalf of a responsible, civilised society?
      • It's a question of them doing a triage with the most important papers they are trying to affect and those reporters with whom they get along best.
      • An infosec ‘consultant’ goes through a short triage, and either sends the project for more evaluation or gives it a green light if the security risk is minimal.
      • A close cousin to the complete overhaul is a triage approach, in which you stop new development temporarily and remedy only the most heinous problems.
      • This means I have to haul stuff upstairs, sort through the boxes, and perform triage.
      • As a result, the programs are being more widely disseminated, and there are plans for a pilot project that will combine the three approaches in a triage model for youth entering the system.
      • Using a sort of corporate triage, they form teams with the company's own employees to diagnose weaknesses and prescribe a strategy to preserve cash and restructure the business.
      • Nine measurement points were used after the introduction of triage to allow multiple cross sectional comparisons of data during the sequential inclusion of the sites into the study.
      • Is the administration actually doing the environment a favor by performing budget triage, funneling the most money to the neediest sites?
      • Criminal aliens also interpret the triage as indifference.
verbtrēˈäZHtriˈɑʒ
[with object]
  • Assign degrees of urgency to (wounded or ill patients)

    victims were triaged by paramedics before being transported to hospitals

    受难者在被送往医院之前,先由医护人员确定治疗顺序。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • Parlier, the most experienced, triaged the patients on the fantail in the order they needed to be evacuated - the most serious first - and passed them forward on the starboard side to Doc Moser.
    • This anesthesia care provider would assist in triaging patients and coordinating the flow of patients throughout the perioperative area.
    • ‘Treatment with antidepressant, in a sense, triages patients with primary affective disorders to a different path’.
    • They were all triaged and removed to waiting buses to be taken to the terminal.
    • As the evidence for the efficacy of gastric lavage and activated charcoal is only for its use within an hour, it is important that such patients are triaged rapidly.
    • Individual nurses triaged patients across all three sites.
    • We treat everyone as equal and patients are triaged according to clinical need.
    • It is probably best addressed by triaging patients based on their CXR.
    • Instead, patients are triaged and evaluated in the ER, and only then is the cath lab team called in to the hospital.
    • Patients are triaged on the basis of medical history, a validated clinical prediction rule, and reported daytime sleepiness.
    • From this point, litter bearers transported the patient to the battalion aid station where the medical officer triaged the patient and delivered additional emergency care.
    • The first step toward triaging decisions should be for company managers to imagine themselves in the place of the company's various stakeholders - beginning with employees.
    • The hope has been, and had been for some time, that an improved use of software and triaging facilities would improve the non-response rate.
    • Both casualties were triaged and admitted to the HDU for overnight care.
    • Patients with less acute injuries may be triaged to an outpatient surgery center, or a surgery center may be asked to take overflow patients from acute care hospitals.
    • Patients would be triaged, and the seriously ill admitted to hospitals for treatment.
    • Once triaged, the casualty can be moved into the treatment tent for treatment by a physician.
    • The women who were more likely to be triaged to revascularization (driven by high-risk anatomy), had a higher mortality risk.
    • And there was chaos there for a little while, as everyone just tried to figure out what was going on, and we started triaging the victims.
    • These protein markers have been used to monitor therapy, detect recurrences and triage patients for intensive treatment protocols.

Origin

Early 18th century (in the sense ‘the action of sorting items according to quality’): from French, from trier ‘separate out’. The current sense dates from the 1930s, from the military system of assessing the wounded on the battlefield.

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