Online Google Dictionary

triage 中文解釋 wordnet sense Collocation Usage Collins Definition
Verb
/trēˈäZH/,/ˈtrēˌäZH/,
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triages, plural;
  1. Assign degrees of urgency to (wounded or ill patients)

Noun
  1. The action of sorting according to quality

  2. (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


  1. sorting and allocating aid on the basis of need for or likely benefit from medical treatment or food
  2. Triage is a process of determining the priority of patients treatments based on the severity of their condition. This rations patient treatment efficiently when resources are insufficient for all to be treated immediately. ...
  3. Triage is a 2009 drama film starring Colin Farrell, Paz Vega and Christopher Lee. The film focuses on the psychological effects of war on a photo journalist. It is based on the novel Triage by American veteran war correspondent Scott Anderson.
  4. Assessment or sorting according to quality; The process of sorting patients so as to determine the order in which they will be treated (for example, by assigning precedence according to the urgency of illness or injury); To assess or sort according to quality or some other aspect
  5. the procedure for deciding the order in which to treat casualties
  6. Sorting out the wounded at a major incident so that the most serious cases are treated first.
  7. The process by which patients are sorted or classified according to the type and urgency of their conditions.
  8. (JP 1-02, NATO) - The evaluation and classification of casualties for purposes of treatment and evacuation. ...
  9. The evaluation of patients to assess the seriousness of their conditions and prioritize the urgency for care. In the setting of managed care, triage is often performed after office hours on the telephone by a nurse or other health professional to screen patients for emergency treatment.
  10. A formal system used to identify, classify, and treat people according to the severity of their condition(s).
  11. the classification of sick or injured persons according to severity in order to direct care and ensure the efficient use of medical and nursing staff and facilities
  12. The use of simple procedures for rapidly sorting affected people into groups so as to expedite treatment and maximize the effective use of medical and monitoring supplies. (Source: Use of Prussian Blue (Ferric Hexacyanoferrate) for Decorporation of Radiocaesium, page 34, Health Protection Agency)
  13. This term is derived from how doctors triage patients into different priorities. Mozilla applies it to the bug quality assurance process. QA volunteers triage bugs into appropriate priorities and severities.
  14. Literally means ‘sorting’.  In a multiple casualty incident, patients are sorted into four color-coded groups according to the severity of their injuries:  Minor (green), Delayed (yellow), Immediate (red) and Dead (black).
  15. The process of prioritizing patient care based on severity of injury and chance of survival.
  16. The system of prioritizing patients in an emergency situation in which there are a great number of injured or ill.
  17. in emergency medicine, the screening of sick and wounded patients during war, disasters, or other emergencies. ...
  18. The process that is used to review newly reported or reopened bugs and assign a priority and iteration for working on them.
  19. (French) One of the steps of the methode champenoise process whereby some fermentable sugar and yeast is added to the base wine in bottle to induce the secondary fermentation.
  20. The process by which projects or activities are prioritized to determine which should be attempted first, second, etc. and which projects or activities should never be done at all. This process applies to the cleansing process to determine which data should be cleaned first, second, etc. ...
  21. A system for allocating scarce resources; it provides the maximum resources to individuals of highest priority, and few or no resources to individuals of lowest priority. Derived from practices used to prevent medical systems from being overwhelmed when there are many sick or injured.
  22. A system used to sort workloads into categories in a service environment. This method facilitates prioritization of the workloads by urgency, level of difficulty, or length of activity, to reduce delays in performing the service.
  23. This is a system of sorting patients according to their illness or injuries so that patients can be steered to the most appropriate health worker.
  24. One painful aspect of military medicine is the need for triage to determine where to use limited medical resources when these were overwhelmed by the numbers of sick or injured persons. ...
  25. The assessment and categorization of patients to determine the level of care needed and to prioritize who should be treated first.