Rapid Response for Deteriorating Patients

Our Services

Rapid Response for Deteriorating Patients

A patient’s condition can change unexpectedly during hospital admission. Rapid recognition and intervention may help prevent further complications.

At New Padre Garcia Hospital, the healthcare team responds when an admitted patient develops significant changes in breathing, circulation, consciousness, vital signs, pain, bleeding, or overall condition.

Nurses promptly report concerning findings, and the appropriate medical team reassesses the patient and begins available treatment.

Depending on the situation, the patient may require emergency intervention, closer monitoring, transfer to another unit, or referral to a higher-level facility.

Service Overview

Rapid Response for Deteriorating Patients

This service supports immediate reassessment when an admitted patient shows signs of worsening.

Depending on the patient’s condition and available capabilities, the response may include:

The response provided depends on the patient’s condition and the resources immediately available.

Advantages

Early Recognition

Staff are trained to report significant changes in symptoms and vital signs.

Immediate Reassessment

The patient receives prompt clinical review when deterioration is suspected.

Airway, Breathing, and Circulation Support

Urgent interventions may be provided according to medical need.

Coordinated Team Response

Nurses, doctors, respiratory personnel, and diagnostic teams may work together.

Emergency Diagnostic Support

Laboratory and imaging requests may help identify the cause of deterioration.

Treatment Escalation

The patient may receive stronger treatment, closer monitoring, or transfer to another unit.

Family Communication

Authorized representatives may be updated according to privacy and hospital policies.

Referral and Transfer Support

Patients requiring advanced care may be stabilized for transfer.

FAQs

Frequently Asked Questions

Severe breathing difficulty, confusion, low oxygen levels, chest pain, heavy bleeding, seizures, or sudden vital-sign changes are concerning.

Patients, companions, nurses, and other healthcare workers should immediately report significant changes.

Notify the assigned nurse immediately or call (043) 772-0437.

Appointment

HAS THE PATIENT’S CONDITION SUDDENLY CHANGED?

Immediately notify the assigned hospital staff. Our team provides rapid reassessment, emergency intervention, closer monitoring, and transfer coordination when required.