Back to competency map

Clinical competency

Emergency recognition, escalation, and disposition planning

Teaches recognition of medical or psychiatric emergencies and the steps required to escalate care safely. The competency includes de-escalation, clinical consultation, 911 or emergency department transfer, serious-event escalation, and referral to appropriate higher-level care.

Mixed evidenceModern clinical

Looking for something specific? Ask Blossom

Guidelines

29

Courses

3

Providers

3

Protocols

7

Classification

Source quality

Course pageLab manualProtocol paperSOP / guidebookTrial supplement

Also known as

Acute safety and emergency responseAdverse event responseCrisis and escalation responseCrisis escalation and hospitalization decision-makingDistress recognition and de-escalationEmergency disposition and referral planningEmergency escalation and consultationEmergency escalation and crisis coordinationEmergency escalation and referralEmergency medical readinessEmergency preparednessEmergency recognition and escalationEmergency response and de-escalationEmergency response and escalationEscalate to emergency careEscalation to medical and psychiatric supportManage adverse events and emergency readinessManagement of emergency medical transferMedical and psychiatric escalationMedical emergency escalationMedical emergency readinessMedical emergency recognition and escalationMedical emergency recognition and responseMedical emergency response coordinationMedical escalation and emergency responseMedical readiness and emergency responseMedical referral coordinationMedical supervision readinessRecognition of acute psychological emergenciesRecognition of adverse reactions and emergenciesRescue and escalation planningSerious event escalation and emergency response

Across the manuals

The manuals converge on rapid recognition of medical and psychiatric deterioration, with escalation to the study physician, onsite psychiatrist, medical monitor, emergency services, emergency department transfer, or hospital care when safety concerns arise. Across the extracts, common triggers include severe anxiety, psychosis, suicidality, chest pain, neurological deficits, hypertension, cardiovascular instability, and other acute complications. Several sources also emphasise staying with the participant, providing observation or support, and only discharging once stability is judged to have returned. They also converge on a stepped response before or alongside higher-level care, such as verbal reassurance, grounding, breathing, rescue medication, oxygen, or other protocol-authorised measures. Many manuals place emergency readiness within a team structure, with physician oversight, on-call availability, or nearby emergency-trained staff, and some require explicit emergency plans, equipment, or transport arrangements. The manuals differ in the level of specificity and the kinds of emergencies highlighted. Some focus mainly on psychiatric escalation and disposition planning, while others give detailed medical pathways for events such as hypertensive crisis, myocardial infarction, arrhythmia, seizure, allergic reaction, or overdose. A few sources name particular medications or tools, such as lorazepam, olanzapine, clonazepam, captopril, amlodipine, naloxone, defibrillation, or ACLS procedures, whereas others stay at the level of consultation, referral, or transfer.

In practice

What it looks like on the ground

  • Recognises acute distress, psychosis, suicidality, or medical instability and escalates promptly
  • Coordinates immediately with the study physician, onsite psychiatrist, or medical monitor
  • Uses protocol-authorised calming measures or rescue medication before or alongside transfer
  • Arranges emergency department transfer, EMS activation, or hospitalisation when safety is compromised

Synthesised from the linked source documents; refreshed as the library updates.

Linked sources

The guidelines, courses, and providers that evidence this competency. Full lists are a Blossom Pro feature.

Linked guidelines (29)

Unlock every linked source

See all linked guidelines, courses, and providers behind this competency, plus the full competency graph.