Neftaly Strategies for Efficient Triage of Patients with Chemical Burns
Chemical burns are acute injuries caused by corrosive substances, including acids, alkalis, or industrial chemicals. They often result in rapid tissue damage, systemic toxicity, and potentially life-threatening complications. Efficient triage is essential in industrial accidents, laboratory incidents, or mass chemical exposures to save lives, prevent further injury, and prioritize treatment for the most critical patients. Neftaly Strategies for Efficient Triage of Patients with Chemical Burns provides first responders, emergency medical teams, and healthcare providers with systematic methods to evaluate, categorize, and manage chemical burn victims rapidly and safely.
Core Principles of Neftaly Chemical Burn Triage
- Immediate Risk Assessment
Identify life-threatening chemical exposure, airway compromise, and signs of systemic toxicity.
- Safety First
Protect responders with personal protective equipment (PPE) to prevent secondary contamination.
- Rapid Primary Survey
Evaluate Airway, Breathing, Circulation (ABC) concurrently with chemical exposure assessment.
- Structured Prioritization
Assign triage categories based on burn severity, body surface area affected, depth of injury, and systemic effects.
Neftaly Strategies in Action
- Scene Safety and Containment
Ensure the environment is safe; contain chemical spill and prevent cross-contamination.
Remove contaminated clothing and flush affected areas with copious amounts of water.
- Primary Survey – ABC Evaluation
Airway: Assess for inhalation injuries, smoke inhalation, or chemical vapor exposure; maintain airway with supplemental oxygen.
Breathing: Observe for respiratory distress, wheezing, or cyanosis; provide oxygen and ventilatory support if needed.
Circulation: Monitor pulse, blood pressure, and signs of shock; initiate IV fluids for large surface area burns or hypotension.
- Chemical Burn Assessment
Extent of Burn: Estimate Total Body Surface Area (TBSA) using “Rule of Nines” or Lund-Browder chart.
Depth of Burn: Identify superficial, partial-thickness, and full-thickness injuries.
Chemical Type: Determine if the burn is acid, alkali, or other chemical, as alkalis often penetrate deeper.
Associated Injuries: Evaluate for inhalation injury, ocular involvement, or systemic toxicity.
- Triage Categorization
Immediate (Red): Airway compromise, extensive burns (>20% TBSA in adults, >10% in children), deep chemical penetration, or systemic toxicity.
Urgent (Yellow): Moderate burns, stable airway, no systemic compromise.
Minor (Green): Superficial burns with minimal TBSA, patient walking and stable.
Expectant (Black): Extensive, non-survivable chemical burns or delayed intervention with poor prognosis.
- Rapid Interventions
Decontamination: Immediate removal of chemicals, thorough irrigation for at least 20–30 minutes.
Airway Support: Oxygen, suction, and advanced airway if needed.
Pain Management: Administer analgesics as appropriate.
Fluid Resuscitation: For extensive burns or shock.
Rapid Evacuation: Transfer to burn centers or specialized care units.
Tools and Techniques
Personal Protective Equipment (PPE) for responders.
Irrigation Equipment for rapid chemical washout.
Triage Tags & Color Codes for visual prioritization.
Simulation Drills to practice mass chemical burn triage scenarios.
Benefits of Neftaly Strategies
Early Risk Identification: Quickly detects life-threatening injuries.
Structured Triage: Optimizes prioritization for limited resources.
Rapid Intervention: Minimizes tissue damage and systemic toxicity.
Preparedness: Builds confidence and efficiency among emergency responders.
Neftaly Strategies for Efficient Triage of Patients with Chemical Burns equips medical teams with systematic, rapid, and safe methods to assess, prioritize, and stabilize chemical burn victims, improving survival and reducing long-term complications in emergency scenarios.

