Neftaly Practices for Quick Evaluation of Hemorrhagic Shock provides emergency responders, healthcare professionals, and first-aid practitioners with essential tools to rapidly identify and manage life-threatening blood loss. Hemorrhagic shock is one of the leading preventable causes of death in trauma. Quick evaluation and early intervention are critical to preserving life, especially in mass-casualty incidents, disaster settings, or industrial accidents where multiple patients may present simultaneously.
The program begins by explaining the pathophysiology of hemorrhagic shock. Participants learn how uncontrolled bleeding reduces circulating blood volume, leading to inadequate oxygen delivery to vital organs. Left untreated, this cascade results in tissue hypoxia, organ failure, and death. Understanding these processes provides the foundation for rapid recognition and response.
A core aspect of the training is recognizing early clinical signs. Because hemorrhagic shock can be subtle in its initial stages, responders must be skilled in detecting the following indicators:
Skin changes: Pale, cool, clammy skin due to poor perfusion.
Heart rate: Tachycardia (fast pulse) as an early compensatory mechanism.
Blood pressure: Initially normal, but dropping significantly as shock progresses.
Respiratory changes: Rapid, shallow breathing.
Mental status: Restlessness, confusion, or decreased responsiveness.
Neftaly emphasizes the “ABC with C-ABC approach” (Airway, Breathing, Circulation—with Catastrophic Bleeding first). In hemorrhagic trauma, controlling major bleeding takes priority before addressing airway and breathing. Participants are trained to perform a quick blood sweep of the body to identify external bleeding sources and to apply immediate life-saving measures such as direct pressure, wound packing, or tourniquets.
To improve evaluation speed, the program introduces the Shock Index (SI), calculated as heart rate divided by systolic blood pressure. An SI greater than 0.9 is often an early warning sign of hemorrhagic shock, even before obvious hypotension develops. This simple tool can be used in both pre-hospital and hospital environments to prioritize patients for urgent intervention.
Special modules address stages of hemorrhagic shock based on estimated blood loss:
Class I (<15%): Minimal symptoms, slight tachycardia.
Class II (15–30%): Tachycardia, narrowed pulse pressure, mild anxiety.
Class III (30–40%): Significant tachycardia, hypotension, confusion, rapid breathing.
Class IV (>40%): Severe hypotension, altered consciousness, risk of death.
Responders learn how to use these categories to triage patients quickly and determine who requires immediate evacuation to surgical facilities.
The program also includes practical techniques for assessment in challenging environments, such as noisy accident scenes, low-light conditions, or situations with multiple casualties. Trainees practice rapid pulse checks (carotid vs. radial), mental status assessments using the AVPU scale (Alert, Verbal, Pain, Unresponsive), and capillary refill checks as quick indicators of perfusion.
Neftaly places strong emphasis on resource-limited scenarios, where responders may not have access to advanced monitors or blood tests. Instead, trainees learn to rely on quick physical observations, vital sign trends, and structured assessment tools to make lifesaving decisions.
By the end of the program, participants will be able to:
Rapidly recognize the subtle and obvious signs of hemorrhagic shock.
Apply the C-ABC principle to prioritize bleeding control.
Use quick assessment tools such as the Shock Index and AVPU scale.
Classify shock severity to guide triage and treatment.
Act decisively under pressure to save lives.
Neftaly Practices for Quick Evaluation of Hemorrhagic Shock equips responders with practical, evidence-based methods to identify shock early, intervene rapidly, and prevent avoidable deaths in trauma care.

