Chart — Leadership & Management
Chain of Command Escalation Chart
Step-by-step escalation levels, roles, communication format, triggers, and documentation requirements for unresolved patient safety concerns.
Educational use only. Chain-of-command procedures vary by facility. Always follow your institution's specific escalation policies. Skip steps when patient is at imminent risk. This material supports nursing education and exam review. It is not medical advice and is not a substitute for clinical judgment, institutional policy, or medical direction. Always follow facility protocols and current provider orders.
Escalation Pathway
| Level | Contact | Trigger | Document |
|---|---|---|---|
| Step 1 | Attending Physician / Provider | Clinical concern identified; initial standard of care | Time of call, information reported, provider response |
| Step 2 | Charge Nurse | Provider unresponsive within a reasonable time OR dismissing a legitimate safety concern | Time charge nurse notified, charge nurse's response, next step agreed upon |
| Step 3 | House Supervisor / Nursing Supervisor | Charge nurse unable to resolve OR charge nurse also unresponsive | Time supervisor contacted, content of discussion, actions taken |
| Step 4 | Nurse Manager / Director of Nursing | Supervisor unable to resolve; persistent systemic failure or pattern | Time contacted, outcome, any systemic issues identified |
| Step 5 | Chief Nursing Officer / Administrator on Call | All prior steps exhausted; imminent risk to patient safety | Complete documentation of all escalation steps taken and responses |
Escalation Triggers by Situation
| Situation | When and How to Escalate |
|---|---|
| Unsafe or incomplete order | Immediately; refuse and notify charge nurse simultaneously |
| Provider not responding to urgent page/call within 30 min | Step 2 after 1–2 documented attempts |
| Provider dismisses documented clinical deterioration | Step 2 immediately after the dismissal |
| Colleague practicing unsafely | Step 2; document observations objectively |
| Staffing ratios compromising patient safety | Step 2–3; document specific patient assignment concerns |
| Equipment malfunction unresolved | Charge nurse immediately; house supervisor if urgent |
| Clinical deterioration — RRT criteria met | Activate RRT AND escalate simultaneously |
SBAR for Escalation
| Component | Content | Example |
|---|---|---|
| S — Situation | Who you are, who the patient is, what is happening right now | “I'm the nurse for Mr. Davis in 412. His SpO₂ is 84% and dropping.” |
| B — Background | Relevant clinical history, admitting diagnosis, current orders | “He's a 67-year-old with COPD admitted for pneumonia, currently on 4L NC.” |
| A — Assessment | What you think is happening; your clinical impression | “He appears to be in respiratory distress. I'm concerned he may be decompensating.” |
| R — Recommendation | What you need: an order, a bedside evaluation, a transfer | “I need you to come assess him now and consider a chest X-ray and ABG.” |
Documentation Checklist
Document each escalation attempt with:
- Exact time of each contact attempt
- Name and role of person contacted
- Specific information communicated
- Response received (or “no response” with time waited)
- Action taken as a result
- Clinical outcome or patient status at time of escalation
Document facts only — no opinions or accusations. Record direct quotes when possible.
Related Resources
Standards & sources
Fact-checked Jun 21, 2026This page is written to align with American Nurses Association (ANA) — Nursing Administration: Scope & Standards · American Organization for Nursing Leadership (AONL). It is an educational summary, not a citation of any single document — always verify specific doses, values, and protocols against current guidelines and your facility policy. How we source content →
