Early Warning Signs
Respiratory Changes
Neuro & Cardiac
Scoring Tools & Epic DI
Rapid Response
100

Most commonly overlooked vital sign that is an early indicator of deterioration

What is respiratory rate?

100

First physiological response to hypoxia

What is tachypnea?

100

Early neurological sign of deterioration

 What is confusion?

100

Two common early warning scoring tools

What are MEWS and NEWS?

100

Primary goal of the rapid response team

What is to prevent cardiac arrest?

200

How long before a cardiac arrest do patients often show warning signs?

What is 6–24 hours?

200

Why tachypnea occurs in metabolic acidosis

What is to blow off CO₂?

200

 Early cardiovascular response to stress

What is tachycardia?

200

What does a higher early warning score indicate

What is higher risk of deterioration?

200

When should you call a rapid response

What is when there is acute change or concern?

300

Name one early sign of clinical deterioration

What is tachypnea / confusion / tachycardia?

300

Name one sign of increased work of breathing

What is accessory muscle use / retractions / nasal flaring?

300

Late sign indicating failure of compensation

What is hypotension?

300

Score range for Epic’s deterioration index

What is 0–100?

300

Name one member of the rapid response team

What is ICU nurse / RT / provider?

400

This subjective factor alone is enough to trigger a rapid response

What is staff concern?

400

Why SpO₂ can be misleading early in deterioration

What is it may remain normal due to compensation or oxygen therapy?

400

What does bradycardia often indicate in a deteriorating patient

What is impending cardiac arrest?

400

Name one type of data Epic DI uses

 What are vitals, labs, nursing documentation, or patient history?

400

True or False: You should wait for provider orders before calling RRT

What is False?

500

A patient has stable vitals but becomes suddenly restless and states they feel “off.” What is the priority nursing action?

What is perform a focused reassessment and consider early escalation

500

A patient on 4L nasal cannula has SpO₂ of 95% but is tachypneic with increased work of breathing. Why is this concerning?

What is the patient is compensating and at risk for respiratory failure despite normal oxygen saturation?

500

A patient becomes acutely confused with a normal blood pressure. What does this most likely indicate?

What is early hypoxia or decreased cerebral perfusion?

500

A patient’s Epic DI score rises from 35 to 70 over 3 hours, but vital signs are only mildly abnormal. What is the best nursing action?

What is reassess the patient and escalate care based on rising risk trends?

500

A nurse is unsure whether a patient meets strict RRT criteria but feels the patient is declining. What is the most appropriate action?

What is activate the rapid response team based on clinical concern?

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