Reference — Leadership & Management
Chain of Command Reference
The chain of command is the nurse's structured escalation pathway for unresolved patient safety concerns. Using it is both a professional obligation and a legal protection. This reference covers each escalation level, when to activate it, how to communicate, and what to document.
Educational use only. This content is intended for nursing students and exam preparation. Chain of command structures vary by institution — always follow your facility's escalation policy. 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.
Core Principle
Patient safety supersedes all hierarchical considerations. If a provider does not respond to a legitimate patient safety concern, you have a professional and ethical obligation to escalate — even if that means going above the provider. Failure to escalate when patient safety is at risk is itself a breach of professional and legal standards.
Escalation Hierarchy
When to Activate
Patient safety concern, clinical deterioration, concerning assessment findings, abnormal labs or vitals, new symptoms
How to Communicate
Telephone or secure message. Use SBAR format. State your concern clearly: 'I'm calling because I'm concerned about my patient's safety.'
Expected Response
New orders, reassessment visit, or clear clinical plan. If response is dismissive, inadequate, or no response in an appropriate time frame — escalate.
When to Activate
Provider has not responded adequately, you are uncertain how to proceed, the situation is beyond your current skill level
How to Communicate
Inform charge nurse of the clinical concern and your prior communication attempts. Request backup and guidance.
Expected Response
Charge nurse may contact provider directly, involve additional resources, or initiate further escalation.
When to Activate
Charge nurse unable to resolve; concern about immediate patient safety; provider still not responding appropriately
How to Communicate
Call house supervisor directly. Have documentation of all prior escalation attempts ready.
Expected Response
Supervisor has authority to involve administration, hospital administration, or risk management.
When to Activate
Ongoing safety concern, systemic staffing or safety issue, ethical conflict requiring leadership resolution
How to Communicate
Contact nurse manager per institutional policy (may be after-hours contact). Document everything.
Expected Response
Management-level resolution, policy activation, or administrative involvement.
When to Activate
All lower levels failed to resolve an immediate patient safety concern OR ethical issue requires institutional response
How to Communicate
Escalation through house supervisor or nursing director. Patient safety trumps hierarchy.
Expected Response
Institutional response, policy review, and patient safety action.
SBAR for Escalation Communication
| Component | Content | Example |
|---|---|---|
| S — Situation | State who you are, your patient, and what is happening right now | 'This is Nurse Rivera calling about Mr. Thompson in Room 412. His blood pressure has dropped to 78/50.' |
| B — Background | Relevant clinical history: diagnosis, admitting condition, recent changes | 'He was admitted yesterday for HF exacerbation. He's been on IV furosemide. This morning he had a 1L diuresis and now his BP has dropped.' |
| A — Assessment | Your clinical conclusion about what is happening | 'I'm concerned he may be over-diuresed and volume depleted.' |
| R — Recommendation | What you need the provider to do — be specific | 'I'd like you to come assess him now, or order a 500 mL NS bolus and hold the furosemide.' |
Documentation When Using the Chain of Command
Document every contact attempt
Time, date, method (phone, pager, secure message), and who you spoke with or left a message with
Document the content of communication
What information you provided (SBAR format), what the provider said in response, and any orders given or withheld
Document patient condition at each contact
Vital signs, symptoms, assessment findings at the time of each escalation — not just the initial report
Document escalation path
If you escalated above the primary provider: who you contacted, at what time, and what the response was
Document patient outcome
What happened after escalation — was care rendered? Did patient condition improve or deteriorate?
Use objective language only
Never document frustration or negative characterizations of providers or colleagues in the legal medical record. 'Dr. Smith did not respond within 30 minutes to two pages' is appropriate. 'Dr. Smith ignored my calls' is not.
When to Bypass Normal Chain of Command
In the following situations, you may need to bypass the standard hierarchical escalation and go directly to a higher level or activate an emergency response:
- !Patient deteriorating rapidly with immediate threat to life — activate rapid response team directly
- !Provider giving a clearly dangerous or unethical order — refuse the order, contact charge nurse/supervisor immediately
- !Evidence of patient abuse or neglect — mandatory reporting may require going directly to administration or a regulatory body
- !Witnessing a colleague's impaired practice — contact charge nurse or supervisor immediately, not after completing your shift
- !Provider sexual harassment or threatening behavior toward staff — contact house supervisor and HR simultaneously
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 →
