Risk factors present (max 16) — a checklist tally, not a validated prediction score. For a validated ICU model use E-PRE-DELIRIC (at admission) or PRE-DELIRIC (after 24 h).
Bands: Few 0–3 · Several 4–6 · Many 7–10 · Very many 11+ (heuristic)
Evidence of acute change from mental status baseline, OR fluctuation during the day? Anchor "baseline" with family/collateral on admission — Feature 1 cannot be scored without it.
Letters task: say S-A-V-E-A-H-A-A-R-T (10 letters, ~1 every 3 sec); patient squeezes on each "A".
Can't do letters (deaf, language barrier, non-verbal)? Use the Pictures ASE — show 5 pictures to memorize, then 10 recognition pictures (yes/no); >2 errors out of 10 = positive (same 0–10 scale as the letters task).
Ask the 4 yes/no questions, then the command. Disorganized thinking present if combined errors >1.
- Will a stone float on water?
- Are there fish in the sea?
- Does one pound weigh more than two pounds?
- Can you use a hammer to pound a nail?
Command: "Hold up this many fingers" (examiner holds up 2), then "Now do the same with the other hand" (or add one finger). Any wrong answer or failed command counts as one error.
Limitations: score against the patient's baseline; reduced accuracy in primary neurologic injury/TBI, aphasia, or deep sedation. Missed cases are predominantly hypoactive — screen every shift.
A positive CAM-ICU is a screen, not a diagnosis — confirm clinically and exclude mimics.
Delirium vs mimics
Depression — can look hypoactive; mood-driven, attention less affected.
Receptive aphasia / focal stroke — focal deficit, not global inattention → neuro exam + imaging.
Non-convulsive seizures / status — unexplained ↓LOC → EEG.
Catatonia — posturing, mutism, waxy flexibility.
Intoxication / withdrawal — substance history; treat the cause.
These can coexist with delirium — known dementia does not exclude superimposed delirium.
Logged this session — scratchpad, clears on reload, not saved to the record
No assessments logged this session.
SAT / SBT safety screen & failure criteria
SAT — do NOT interrupt sedation if: active seizures · alcohol withdrawal on sedation · escalating sedation for agitation · neuromuscular blockade · MI in prior 24 h · raised ICP.
SAT failure → stop SAT, restart sedation at HALF the prior dose if: sustained anxiety/agitation/pain · RR >35 for >5 min · SpO₂ <88% for >5 min · acute dysrhythmia · ≥2 signs of respiratory distress.
SBT — proceed only if: SpO₂ >88% on FiO₂ <50% & PEEP <8 · pH >7.15 · no agitation · no ischemia in 24 h · hemodynamically stable · no raised ICP.
SBT failure → abort, resume support if: RR >35 or <8 · SpO₂ <88% · abrupt mental-status change · dysrhythmia · ≥2 distress signs.
Loop: pass SAT → proceed to SBT; fail either → restart sedation at half the prior dose, re-screen in 24 h.
eCASH: minimal sedation is the default — analgesia first, lightest RASS that meets the goal, reassess each shift.
Safety screen first — reddest parameter wins; a single red = hold & discuss with the team.
Progression: passive ROM → active ROM / bed exercises → sit / edge of bed → stand / transfer → ambulate.
Deliriogenic agents? Dose reduction? Also withdrawal — alcohol/benzo/opioid (check last use & home meds; in the ICU treat to RASS, not CIWA).
Glasses & hearing aids in? Whiteboard updated? Lights on daytime?
Check SpO₂, Hgb, cardiac/PE events, liver function.
Fever, leukocytosis, cultures pending? Occult sepsis?
Urinary retention or constipation? Bladder scan; disimpact or catheterize if indicated.
Consider non-convulsive seizures / status — esp. with unexplained ↓LOC. Consider EEG.
Na, Mg, Ca, glucose, BUN/Cr, acid-base. Pain/retention/constipation?
Subdural hematoma (recent fall or anticoagulation)? Sleep deprivation?
Algorithm overview (visual) — the Step cards below are the working checklist
Quick dosing reference
Quetiapine 12.5–25 mg q12h PO
Dexmedetomidine 0.2–0.7 mcg/kg/hr (preferred when agitation prevents weaning)
Lorazepam — withdrawal only (titrate to RASS)
Full doses, cautions & deliriogenic-med review → Medications
Restraints are the last resort after de-escalation, environment, device removal, and 1:1 observation — re-evaluate daily.
These are conventional / expert starting references for short-term agitation control — not RCT- or guideline-calibrated delirium doses. Dexmedetomidine is a sedative infusion for ventilated patients, not a PRN antipsychotic-equivalent.
Facility name is set in the header field at the top of the page — it prints on every exported PDF.
Deeper sedation (RASS ≤ −3) is associated with longer ventilation, more delirium, and higher mortality (observational evidence plus one small RCT; PADIS is conditional, low-certainty). Use it only for a specific indication — it is not a delirium-prevention default.
Settings also auto-save in this browser. Save settings writes a
settings.json; Load settings.json imports one back —
for sharing a configured protocol or moving it between machines.