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The National Early Warning Score 2 (NEWS2) is a standardised physiological scoring system used across the NHS in England and endorsed by the Royal College of Physicians (RCP) to detect clinical deterioration and prompt an appropriate clinical response in acutely unwell adult patients. It was developed to replace and improve upon the original NEWS score (2012) and was updated in 2017 as NEWS2 to address recognition of sepsis and to add a second SpO₂ scale for patients with hypercapnic respiratory failure (chronic obstructive pulmonary disease and other conditions where a lower oxygen target is appropriate). NEWS2 assesses seven physiological parameters — respiratory rate, oxygen saturation (SpO₂), supplemental oxygen use, blood pressure (systolic), heart rate, level of consciousness (AVPU plus new confusion), and temperature — each scored 0 to 3 based on how far they deviate from the normal physiological range. The individual parameter score of 3 is a critical escalation trigger regardless of the total score, as it signals a single extreme physiological abnormality. NEWS2 is now mandated across all NHS acute and ambulance trusts in England and Wales and recommended in Scotland and Northern Ireland. It is embedded in electronic patient record systems (EPR), ambulance dispatch systems, and remote patient monitoring platforms. NICE Quality Standard QS119 (2017) mandates that all NHS organisations use NEWS2 for acute illness severity assessment. Beyond the UK, NEWS2 has been adopted by health systems in Ireland, Australia, New Zealand, and numerous other countries as a standardised deterioration detection tool. The score has been extensively validated for predicting clinical outcomes including cardiac arrest, unanticipated ICU admission, and in-hospital mortality, with a total NEWS2 score of 7 or higher carrying significantly elevated risk. NEWS2 also proved valuable during the COVID-19 pandemic: NHS England guidance recommended SpO₂ Scale 2 for patients with hypercapnic respiratory failure while Scale 1 was retained for COVID-19 patients with normal CO₂ physiology but severe hypoxaemia.
NEWS2 Total Score = Sum of individual parameter scores (0–3 each) Parameter scoring: 1. Respiration Rate (breaths/min): ≤ 8 = 3 pts | 9–11 = 1 pt | 12–20 = 0 pts | 21–24 = 2 pts | ≥ 25 = 3 pts 2a. SpO₂ Scale 1 (standard — use for most patients, including COVID-19): ≤ 91% = 3 pts | 92–93% = 2 pts | 94–95% = 1 pt | ≥ 96% = 0 pts 2b. SpO₂ Scale 2 (hypercapnic patients — COPD with known CO₂ retention, target SpO₂ 88–92%): ≤ 83% = 3 pts | 84–85% = 2 pts | 86–87% = 1 pt | 88–92% = 0 pts | 93–94% on air = 1 pt | 95–96% on air = 2 pts | ≥ 97% on air = 3 pts 3. Supplemental Oxygen: On oxygen = 2 pts | Not on oxygen (air) = 0 pts 4. Systolic Blood Pressure (mmHg): ≤ 90 = 3 pts | 91–100 = 2 pts | 101–110 = 1 pt | 111–219 = 0 pts | ≥ 220 = 3 pts 5. Pulse Rate (bpm): ≤ 40 = 3 pts | 41–50 = 1 pt | 51–90 = 0 pts | 91–110 = 1 pt | 111–130 = 2 pts | ≥ 131 = 3 pts 6. Level of Consciousness (AVPU + new confusion): Alert = 0 pts | New confusion / delirium = 3 pts | Voice responsive = 3 pts | Pain responsive = 3 pts | Unresponsive = 3 pts 7. Temperature (°C): ≤ 35.0 = 3 pts | 35.1–36.0 = 1 pt | 36.1–38.0 = 0 pts | 38.1–39.0 = 1 pt | ≥ 39.1 = 2 pts Total score interpretation: 0: Minimum 12-hourly monitoring 1–4 (Low): Minimum 4–6 hourly monitoring Any single parameter score 3 (Medium): Urgent ward-based review 5–6 (Medium): Urgent review by ward team / clinical evaluation 7+ (High): Emergency response — immediate assessment by team with critical care competencies
- 1Obtain all seven physiological measurements simultaneously or within a short observation window (ideally within 5 minutes). Use calibrated equipment for SpO₂, blood pressure, and temperature. Count respiratory rate by direct clinical observation for a full 60 seconds — do not use monitor-derived values as they are frequently inaccurate. Record the observations on the standard NEWS2 chart.
- 2Assign each parameter its NEWS2 score using the band-based scoring table. Note that some parameters (respiratory rate, blood pressure, pulse rate) score highest at both extremes (too high and too low). Apply Scale 1 SpO₂ scoring to all standard patients including COVID-19 patients with normal CO₂. Apply Scale 2 only to patients with a confirmed clinical decision to target SpO₂88–92% (e.g., documented COPD with hypercapnia on prior ABG).
- 3Identify any single parameter scoring 3 ('red flag' parameter). Even if the total score is low (e.g., total = 3 from a single parameter scoring 3), a single extreme physiological value triggers an urgent ward-level response — a bedside clinical assessment by a registered nurse or clinician, and senior escalation if no obvious correctable cause is found within minutes.
- 4Sum all seven parameter scores to obtain the NEWS2 total. Apply the appropriate response tier based on the total score. Low (1–4): increase monitoring frequency and alert bedside nurse to reassess. Medium (5–6 or any single parameter 3): urgent assessment by ward team, consider senior review, take blood cultures if infection suspected. High (≥7): immediate emergency response by a team with advanced life support and critical care competencies, urgent critical care team involvement.
- 5Document the NEWS2 score on the patient's observation chart, EPR system, or NEWS2 chart. Escalate according to your hospital's escalation policy (e.g., SBAR communication). Trigger additional investigations guided by the clinical picture: blood tests (FBC, U&E, LFTs, CRP, blood cultures, lactate), ECG, chest X-ray, arterial blood gas, or point-of-care ultrasound depending on the likely cause of deterioration.
- 6Reassess and recalculate the NEWS2 score at intervals defined by the score response: continuous monitoring for high-risk patients in escalated care settings, 1-hourly reassessment after initial escalation for medium-risk patients, or 4–6 hourly for stable low-risk patients. NEWS2 trend is as important as the absolute value — a score rising from 2 to 5 over 2 hours signals rapid deterioration even before reaching the high-risk threshold.
- 7Apply NEWS2 for the COVID-19 adaptation: during the pandemic, NHS England specifically recommended Scale 1 SpO₂ for COVID-19 patients (not Scale 2), and emphasised that a seemingly comfortable patient with SpO₂ 91% on air (NEWS2 scale 1 score = 3) may have 'silent hypoxaemia' requiring oxygen therapy and urgent escalation despite appearing clinically well — a phenomenon recognised as 'happy hypoxia' in COVID-19.
Immediate emergency response — possible post-operative sepsis or haemorrhage
A NEWS2 of 13 is a medical emergency. Both RR ≥ 25 and SBP ≤ 90 independently score 3, which alone would trigger urgent response. The total score of 13 mandates immediate bedside assessment by a team with critical care competencies, oxygen therapy optimisation, IV access, blood cultures, lactate, and emergency surgical review for possible anastomotic leak or intra-abdominal sepsis.
Urgent ward review triggered by single parameter score of 3 — assess for post-operative delirium, hypoxia, sepsis, PE
New confusion after surgery in a previously alert patient scores 3 on AVPU even though all other parameters are normal. This single-parameter trigger mandates an urgent bedside assessment. Differential diagnosis includes post-operative delirium (especially in older patients), hypoxaemia not captured by SpO₂ probe position, pulmonary embolism, early sepsis, urinary retention, opiate overdose, or medication side effect. A rapid clinical assessment, medications review, and targeted investigations are required.
Use Scale 2 for documented hypercapnic COPD — SpO₂ 90% is at target for this patient
This patient has a clinician-documented decision to target SpO₂ 88–92% due to known CO₂ retention (type 2 respiratory failure). Using Scale 1, a SpO₂ of 90% would score 3 points, generating a falsely elevated NEWS2 and potentially triggering unnecessary oxygen escalation that could worsen CO₂ retention and cause hypercapnic coma. Scale 2 correctly scores SpO₂ 90% as 0 points in this patient. The total NEWS2 of 5 warrants urgent review for the COPD exacerbation but avoids the inappropriate response Scale 1 would have triggered.
Minimum 12-hourly observations appropriate
All seven parameters fall within the normal physiological band (0 points each), giving a NEWS2 of 0. This patient is physiologically stable and requires minimum 12-hourly routine observations on the ward. No escalation is needed. The NEWS2 system allows clinical staff to confidently reduce monitoring intensity for stable patients, freeing resources for those with higher scores.
General ward nursing staff using NEWS2 as part of routine vital sign observations to trigger appropriate escalation and senior review before patients deteriorate to the point of cardiac arrest, where accurate news2 analysis through the News2 supports evidence-based decision-making and quantitative rigor in professional workflows
NHS ambulance paramedics calculating NEWS2 on scene and transmitting pre-alert notifications to receiving emergency departments for high-scoring patients requiring immediate senior review on arrival, where accurate news2 analysis through the News2 supports evidence-based decision-making and quantitative rigor in professional workflows
Emergency department clinicians using admission NEWS2 as one input into patient disposition decisions — whether to admit, discharge with community follow-up, or step up to high-dependency care, where accurate news2 analysis through the News2 supports evidence-based decision-making and quantitative rigor in professional workflows
Critical care outreach teams (CCOT) using NEWS2 data from the EPR to identify ward patients at risk of ICU admission and proactively intervene before crisis-level deterioration occurs, where accurate news2 analysis through the News2 supports evidence-based decision-making and quantitative rigor in professional workflows
Hospital at Home and virtual ward programmes using wearable sensor-derived NEWS2 as a remote monitoring metric for patients recovering from acute illness in their own homes with automated alert systems for nursing and medical teams
NEWS2 in COVID-19 — 'silent hypoxaemia' and Scale 1
During the COVID-19 pandemic, NHS England issued guidance recommending SpO₂ Scale 1 for COVID-19 patients (not Scale 2), and emphasised that patients with COVID-19 pneumonia could have SpO₂ values as low as 88–90% while appearing comfortable and alert — a phenomenon termed 'silent hypoxaemia' or 'happy hypoxia'. Standard NEWS2 Scale 1 would score SpO₂ 91% as 3 points, triggering urgent escalation. Crucially, in COVID-19 this was appropriate — these patients were at high risk of rapid respiratory decompensation despite subjective comfort. Clinical staff were advised not to be reassured by patient comfort when SpO₂ was below 96%.
Chronic physiological baselines — adjusting interpretation
Some patients have chronic physiological parameters that differ significantly from population norms: an elite endurance athlete may have a resting HR of 38 bpm (scoring 3 for bradycardia) and respiratory rate of 8/min (also scoring 3) while completely well. Patients with treated hypertension may have a SBP of 220 mmHg chronically (scoring 3). In these patients, baseline-adjusted interpretation is clinically necessary — the NEWS2 score should be interpreted alongside known baseline observations documented in the patient's record. Some EPR systems allow clinician-adjusted baselines for individual patients.
NEWS2 in the emergency department — admission risk stratification
NEWS2 on presentation to the emergency department has been validated as a predictor of clinical outcomes and informs admission versus discharge decisions. A NEWS2 of 0 in the ED is associated with very low in-hospital mortality (<0.5%) and may support safe discharge with community follow-up. A NEWS2 ≥ 5 in the ED predicts high risk and strongly supports admission. Several NHS emergency departments now use NEWS2 as an objective input alongside clinical assessment and REMS (Rapid Emergency Medicine Score) to support patient disposition decisions and streaming to high-dependency areas.
Escalation failure — barriers to acting on high NEWS2
Multiple NHS incident reviews have identified 'escalation failure' — situations where a high NEWS2 was recorded but the appropriate clinical response was not initiated — as a key contributory factor in preventable in-hospital deaths. Common barriers include: hierarchical reluctance to escalate concerns, normalisation of a chronically elevated NEWS2 in complex patients ('this is their baseline'), incomplete observation sets due to time pressure, and failure to communicate scores clearly during handover. SBAR (Situation-Background-Assessment-Recommendation) communication training alongside NEWS2 education is recommended to improve escalation behaviour.
Remote patient monitoring and NEWS2
NEWS2 is increasingly being applied in remote patient monitoring (RPM) systems where hospital-at-home patients or post-discharge patients wear wearable sensors that continuously measure HR, SpO₂, respiratory rate, and temperature. Automated NEWS2 calculation from these streams enables early detection of deterioration before hospital readmission becomes necessary. NHS England piloted RPM-based NEWS2 monitoring in COVID-19 'virtual wards' during 2020–2022, with evidence suggesting reduced emergency admissions and patient preference for home monitoring. Virtual wards using NEWS2 are now a component of NHS England's Hospital at Home programme.
| Total NEWS2 Score | Risk Category | Monitoring Frequency | Clinical Response |
|---|---|---|---|
| 0 | Low | Minimum 12-hourly | Continue routine observations |
| 1–4 | Low | Minimum 4–6 hourly | Inform bedside registered nurse; increase frequency |
| Any single = 3 | Medium | Minimum 1-hourly | Urgent assessment by ward team; senior nurse review |
| 5–6 | Medium | Minimum 1-hourly | Urgent ward medical review; consider monitoring environment upgrade |
| 7+ | High | Continuous monitoring | Emergency response: team with critical care competencies; ICU review |
What is NEWS2 and who should it be used for?
NEWS2 (National Early Warning Score 2) is a standardised physiological scoring system for identifying clinical deterioration in acutely ill adult patients aged 16 and over. It uses seven bedside measurements — respiratory rate, oxygen saturation (on either of two SpO₂ scales), supplemental oxygen, blood pressure, heart rate, level of consciousness (AVPU including new confusion), and temperature. It is mandated across all NHS acute trusts in England and Wales, recommended in Scotland and Northern Ireland, and used in ambulance services, emergency departments, and general wards. It is not validated for use in children (paediatric PEWS systems are used instead) or in maternity patients (Modified Obstetric Early Warning Score, MOEWS, is used).
What does a NEWS2 score of 7 or more mean?
A NEWS2 total score of 7 or more (High risk category) requires an emergency response — immediate assessment by a team with advanced life support and critical care competencies, and urgent involvement of the critical care team to assess the patient and determine whether ICU admission, step-up care, or immediate intervention is required. Studies show that NEWS2 ≥ 7 is associated with significantly elevated rates of unanticipated ICU admission, cardiac arrest, and in-hospital mortality. The response must begin within minutes, not hours.
When should I use SpO₂ Scale 2 instead of Scale 1?
SpO₂ Scale 2 should be used only when a clinician has made and documented a specific decision to target SpO₂ of 88–92% for a patient with known or suspected hypercapnic respiratory failure — most commonly COPD with confirmed CO₂ retention on prior arterial blood gas, but also relevant in obesity hypoventilation syndrome and some neuromuscular conditions. Scale 2 recognises that for these patients, SpO₂ values in the 88–92% range are appropriate (score 0) and that giving supplemental oxygen to chase higher SpO₂ targets risks worsening CO₂ retention and respiratory acidosis. For all other patients — including COVID-19 — Scale 1 is used.
Can a single parameter score of 3 trigger escalation even if the total is low?
Yes — this is a critically important feature of NEWS2. Any single parameter scoring 3 triggers an urgent response (medium risk response: bedside assessment by a registered clinical nurse or equivalent, notification of senior nurse, escalation to medical team if no correctable cause identified) regardless of the total score. For example, a patient who is newly confused (AVPU = new confusion, scoring 3) with all other parameters normal has a total NEWS2 of 3 but still requires urgent assessment. The rationale is that a single extreme physiological abnormality may represent an early harbinger of rapid deterioration.
How does NEWS2 compare to qSOFA for identifying sepsis?
NEWS2 and qSOFA are complementary but different tools. qSOFA specifically identifies high-risk sepsis patients outside ICU using three criteria (AMS, RR ≥ 22, SBP ≤ 100). NEWS2 is a broader deterioration detection system across all causes. Studies show NEWS2 ≥ 5 has higher sensitivity for predicting sepsis-related mortality than qSOFA ≥ 2 in emergency patients, while qSOFA has higher specificity. NICE guideline NG51 recommends NEWS2 as the primary sepsis screening tool in NHS settings, with qSOFA as a supplementary tool. During COVID-19, NHS England specifically recommended NEWS2 over qSOFA for identifying patients at risk of deterioration.
What are the limitations of NEWS2?
NEWS2 has several important limitations: (1) It is not validated for children, pregnant women, or patients with chronic physiological abnormalities where baseline parameters differ from population norms (e.g., an athlete with resting HR 45 bpm would always score 1 for HR regardless of clinical status). (2) It does not incorporate laboratory values, making it unable to detect deterioration driven purely by metabolic derangements (e.g., severe hyperkalaemia with normal vitals). (3) Accuracy depends entirely on the quality of clinical observations — inaccurate respiratory rate counting (the most common error) significantly degrades its performance. (4) It generates a point-in-time score and does not automatically capture trends — clinicians must review serial scores.
Is NEWS2 used in ambulance services?
Yes — all NHS ambulance services in England use NEWS2 as part of the pre-hospital assessment. Paramedics calculate NEWS2 on scene and relay the score to receiving emergency departments, allowing early preparation of resuscitation resources and senior clinical notification before patient arrival. A prehospital NEWS2 ≥ 7 triggers a pre-alert call to the hospital, enabling emergency consultants and critical care teams to be prepared at the point of patient arrival. This has been shown to reduce time to definitive treatment in time-critical conditions like sepsis and acute respiratory failure.
How was NEWS2 validated and what outcomes does it predict?
NEWS2 was derived and validated using data from millions of hospital admissions across NHS trusts. The Royal College of Physicians validation studies showed strong predictive validity for composite outcomes of in-hospital cardiac arrest, unanticipated ICU admission, and death within 24 hours of an observation set. NEWS2 outperforms the original NEWS and other early warning scores in most validation studies. The score has an AUROC of approximately 0.85–0.90 for predicting 24-hour mortality in acute medical patients, making it one of the best-performing simple bedside scores available.
プロのヒント
The most important single observation in NEWS2 is the respiratory rate — it is the earliest and most sensitive vital sign of deterioration in the majority of acute illness presentations, including sepsis, respiratory failure, and heart failure. Yet it is the most commonly inaccurate observation due to time pressure and over-reliance on monitor values. Train yourself to count respiratory rate for a full 60 seconds as a non-negotiable habit. A respiratory rate of 22 is qualitatively different from 20 — and that difference scores 2 points and can change the clinical response entirely.
ご存知でしたか?
The original NEWS score (2012) did not include the distinction for new confusion in the AVPU assessment — it simply scored V, P, and U as 3 points without specifically calling out confusion. The update to NEWS2 in 2017 explicitly added 'new confusion' as a 3-point trigger alongside V, P, and U, recognising that acute delirium is a critical early warning sign of sepsis, metabolic disturbance, and neurological deterioration that is frequently underappreciated by clinical staff when other vital signs appear relatively normal. This single change represented a major clinical safety improvement.
参考文献
- ›Royal College of Physicians. National Early Warning Score (NEWS) 2: Standardising the assessment of acute-illness severity in the NHS — RCP 2017
- ›Smith GB et al. The ability of the National Early Warning Score (NEWS) to discriminate patients at risk of early cardiac arrest, unanticipated intensive care unit admission, and death — Resuscitation 2013
- ›NICE Quality Standard QS119: Acute Medical Emergencies in Adults — NICE 2017
- ›Inada-Kim M et al. Validation of the National Early Warning Score 2 for predicting early death in patients presenting to emergency departments — Emerg Med J 2021
- ›NHS England. COVID-19: guidance for stepdown of infection control precautions and discharging COVID-19 patients — including NEWS2 SpO₂ guidance 2020