Structures rapid response team activation criteria and nursing documentation during rapid response events. Use when activating rapid response, documenting RRT events, or recognizing deterioration.
Rapid Response Teams (RRTs) were established as a patient safety strategy following the Institute for Healthcare Improvement's 100,000 Lives Campaign. The Joint Commission requires hospitals to have a method for staff to directly request additional assistance for patients with deteriorating conditions (LD.04.04.05). Failure-to-rescue — the inability to recognize and intervene when a patient's condition deteriorates — is a CMS quality measure and a leading contributor to preventable in-hospital deaths. Research shows that patients exhibit measurable signs of deterioration 6–8 hours before cardiac arrest. Early warning score systems (MEWS, NEWS) combined with rapid response activation have been shown to reduce cardiac arrests outside the ICU by 17–50%. This skill structures the bedside nurse's role in recognizing deterioration, activating the RRT, managing the patient during the event, and documenting the episode per institutional and regulatory requirements.
Checkpoint A — Intake Verification
Continuous Monitoring Data Required
Current vital signs with trending from the last 12–24 hours
관련 스킬
Current early warning score (MEWS, NEWS, or institutional equivalent)
Baseline vital signs and mental status for this patient
Current medication list (especially vasopressors, sedatives, respiratory support)
Code status and advance directives
Most recent laboratory results (BMP, CBC, lactate, ABG if available)
Trend vital signs against patient's baseline — a patient deteriorating from their own baseline is significant even if values are within normal reference ranges
Identify subtle signs of deterioration before overt decompensation:
Increasing oxygen requirements
Subtle mental status changes (new restlessness, increasing somnolence, inability to maintain conversation)
Rising lactate levels
Declining urine output
New tachycardia or tachypnea
Apply clinical judgment: the "worried" criterion is valid — if you are concerned about a patient's trajectory, that is sufficient to activate the RRT
Step 2 — Activate the Rapid Response Team
Call the RRT using the institutional activation method (dedicated phone number, overhead page, or communication device)
State: "This is [name], RN on [unit]. I am calling a rapid response for [patient name] in Room [number]."
Provide brief reason: "The patient has [specific concern: acute respiratory distress / hypotension / change in mental status]."
Request additional resources if needed before the RRT arrives:
Crash cart at bedside
Additional nursing support
Respiratory therapy
Notify the attending physician/primary team simultaneously (if not automatic with RRT activation)
Assign a documenter if possible — real-time documentation is critical during rapid response events
Step 3 — Prepare for RRT Arrival
While waiting for the RRT (typically arrival within 5 minutes):
Assess ABCs (Airway, Breathing, Circulation) and intervene as needed within nursing scope:
Open airway, position for optimal ventilation (high Fowler's for respiratory distress, supine with legs elevated for hypotension)
Administer or increase supplemental oxygen
Establish or verify IV access (minimum 18G or largest available)
Obtain a full set of vital signs if not already current
Gather SBAR information for the RRT:
S: Current situation and reason for activation
B: Admitting diagnosis, relevant history, current treatment, baseline vital signs and mental status
A: Nursing assessment — what has changed, what is concerning
R: What has been done so far, what you think is needed
Have available: medication list, allergy list, code status, recent labs
Connect patient to continuous monitoring if not already on telemetry/SpO2
Step 4 — Manage the Rapid Response Event
During the RRT event, the bedside nurse's role includes:
Report SBAR to the RRT leader upon arrival
Facilitate orders: draw labs (STAT BMP, CBC, lactate, ABG, troponin, BNP as ordered), administer medications, adjust oxygen delivery
Monitor and communicate changes in real-time: vital signs every 5 minutes during the event (or continuously if on monitor)
Document in real-time or assign a documenter:
Time of each assessment, intervention, and provider order
Vital signs at each measurement point
Medications administered with dose, route, time
Patient response to each intervention
Communicate with family per institutional policy — family may be present at bedside or updated by a designated nurse
Prepare for escalation if condition does not improve: ICU transfer preparation, code team activation if clinical arrest occurs
Step 5 — Manage Post-RRT Disposition
Transfer to ICU: If patient requires ICU-level care:
Complete transfer documentation
Provide SBAR handoff to ICU nurse
Accompany patient during transfer with monitoring
Ensure all pending results have follow-up plan communicated
Remain on unit with increased monitoring: If patient stabilizes:
Implement new orders (increased monitoring frequency, new medications, new laboratory schedule)
Update the care plan to reflect current condition and new interventions
Reassess vital signs per post-RRT monitoring protocol (typically q1h × 4h, then per physician order)
Recalculate early warning score with each assessment set
Transition to comfort care: If goals of care change:
Facilitate goals-of-care discussion with patient/family and medical team
Implement palliative care or hospice referral as appropriate
Modify code status if patient/family directs
Step 6 — Document the Rapid Response Event
Complete documentation within 2 hours of the event:
Pre-event: Vital sign trends, early warning score that triggered concern, assessment findings
Activation: Time of RRT call, method of activation, reason stated
Event timeline: Chronological documentation of assessments, interventions, and provider orders with timestamps
Team members: Names and roles of RRT participants
Interventions: All medications, procedures, tests ordered and performed during the event
Patient response: Response to each intervention, vital sign changes, clinical trajectory
Disposition: Outcome (ICU transfer, remain on unit with new orders, comfort care)
Communication: Provider notifications, family notifications, SBAR handoff if transferred
Follow-up plan: Post-event monitoring schedule, pending results, next reassessment time
Checkpoint B — Post-RRT Review
Documentation Completeness
Activation criteria that triggered the call documented
SBAR communication to RRT documented
Event timeline with timestamps complete
All interventions and patient responses documented
Disposition documented with clinical rationale
Follow-up monitoring plan documented
Family communication documented
Clinical Review
Were there signs of deterioration prior to the RRT that should have triggered earlier activation?
Was the early warning score calculated at the required frequency?
Were all RRT activation criteria recognized in a timely manner?
Was the event escalated appropriately (ICU transfer if indicated, code activation if needed)?
Is the post-event monitoring plan adequate?
Quality Audit
Early warning score calculated per institutional frequency (typically q4h with vitals, or per unit protocol)
RRT activated within appropriate timeframe of meeting activation criteria (no delay in activation)
SBAR handoff to RRT team documented
Complete event documentation with timeline and timestamps
Post-event monitoring implemented per protocol
RRT activation rates tracked per unit (RRT calls per 1,000 patient days)
Cardiac arrest rates outside ICU tracked as inverse metric (successful RRT use reduces cardiac arrests)
Failure-to-rescue rate monitored per CMS quality measure
Post-RRT debriefing conducted per institutional policy
Compliant with Joint Commission LD.04.04.05 (staff ability to request additional assistance)
No activation delays attributable to hierarchical barriers (any staff member may activate RRT)
Guidelines
Joint Commission LD.04.04.05: Staff must be able to directly request additional assistance for patients showing signs of deterioration
IHI 100,000 Lives Campaign: Rapid Response Teams are one of the six interventions recommended to reduce preventable deaths
CMS: Failure-to-rescue is a quality measure; hospitals are expected to have systems for early recognition and response to clinical deterioration
ANA Standards: Standard 1 (Assessment) requires ongoing monitoring; Standard 5 (Implementation) requires appropriate intervention for changes in condition
Early Warning Scores: MEWS and NEWS are validated tools for identifying patients at risk of deterioration; institutions should standardize on one system and set clear activation thresholds
"Worried" criterion: The bedside nurse's clinical concern is a legitimate activation trigger — RRT must respond regardless of whether objective criteria are met
No hierarchy: CMS and Joint Commission expect that any staff member (RN, LPN, aide, respiratory therapist, family member under some policies) can activate the RRT without requiring physician approval
Family activation: Some institutions have implemented Condition H (family-activated rapid response) per IHI recommendation
Post-event debriefing: Recommended by IHI for quality improvement; identify what went well, what could be improved, and system-level contributing factors
Scope of practice: RN recognizes deterioration, activates RRT, initiates emergency interventions within scope (oxygen, positioning, IV access), communicates SBAR, documents the event; advanced practice providers on the RRT direct medical management