SAMPLE history
The SAMPLE history is a mnemonic acronym employed in emergency medicine and prehospital care to systematically gather essential patient information during the secondary assessment phase, enabling providers to identify potential risks, allergies, and contributing factors to the presenting condition.[1][2] It stands for Signs/symptoms, Allergies, Medications, Past medical history, Last oral intake, and Events leading up to the incident, providing a structured framework to collect data quickly in high-stress environments like trauma or cardiac emergencies.[3][4] Developed as a core component of standardized training protocols, the SAMPLE history is integrated into curricula such as the Prehospital Trauma Life Support (PHTLS) program, where it facilitates focused history-taking to inform immediate treatment decisions and prevent complications.[4] First responders, including emergency medical technicians (EMTs) and paramedics, use it alongside vital signs monitoring and physical exams to build a comprehensive patient profile, particularly when the patient is conscious and able to respond.[1][2] Key applications include assessing for life-threatening interactions, such as medication allergies that could contraindicate interventions like epinephrine administration, or recent intake that might affect procedures like intubation.[3] In pediatric advanced life support (PALS), it is adapted to prioritize symptoms and events in vulnerable populations, underscoring its versatility across age groups and scenarios.[4] By emphasizing brevity and relevance, the mnemonic enhances diagnostic accuracy and patient safety in time-critical situations, remaining a foundational tool in modern emergency protocols.[1]Overview
Definition
The SAMPLE history is a mnemonic acronym employed in emergency medical services (EMS) to facilitate a structured and rapid collection of critical patient information during initial assessments.[2] It serves as an interviewing framework that enables healthcare providers, particularly first responders and paramedics, to systematically inquire about key aspects of a patient's condition, thereby supporting timely diagnosis and intervention in high-stakes scenarios.[1] This tool is integral to the secondary assessment phase, where it helps identify potential underlying causes of illness or injury beyond immediate life threats.[5] The acronym expands as follows: S for Signs and Symptoms, which captures the patient's reported or observed manifestations of their condition; A for Allergies, noting any hypersensitivity reactions to medications, foods, or environmental factors; M for Medications, including current prescriptions, over-the-counter drugs, or supplements; P for Past Medical History, encompassing chronic illnesses, surgeries, or relevant prior events; L for Last Oral Intake, referring to the timing and nature of the patient's most recent meal or fluid consumption; and E for Events Leading Up to the Incident, detailing the sequence of circumstances preceding the current episode.[2][5] This expansion ensures a comprehensive yet efficient history-taking process tailored to emergencies.[1] Originating from standardized EMS protocols, the SAMPLE mnemonic was developed as an aide-mémoire to standardize patient evaluations across pre-hospital care settings, enhancing consistency and reducing oversights in chaotic environments.[2] Its adoption reflects broader efforts in emergency medicine to prioritize actionable intelligence for patient stabilization and transport decisions.[1]Purpose in Medical Assessment
The SAMPLE history serves as a structured tool in emergency medical assessment to rapidly gather essential patient information, enabling providers to identify immediate risks such as allergies or medication interactions that could exacerbate conditions like anaphylaxis or respiratory depression.[6] Its primary goals include pinpointing potential life-threatening issues, guiding immediate treatment decisions, and informing differential diagnoses during time-sensitive scenarios, such as prehospital care or initial emergency department evaluations.[7] By systematically addressing key elements like signs/symptoms, allergies, medications, past medical history, last oral intake, and events leading up, it facilitates a focused evaluation that prioritizes patient stabilization.[6] In high-stress environments, such as trauma scenes or mass casualty incidents, the SAMPLE history enhances efficiency by providing a mnemonic-based framework that streamlines data collection without overwhelming providers.[8] This approach reduces the risk of overlooking critical history elements, which could otherwise lead to diagnostic errors or delayed interventions, and supports triage processes in resource-limited settings by allowing quick prioritization of patients based on historical clues to underlying conditions.[7] Studies on checklist-based assessments incorporating similar focused histories have shown improved recognition of acute illnesses, underscoring its role in minimizing morbidity through timely, informed actions.[8] As a secondary assessment step, the SAMPLE history integrates seamlessly following the primary survey focused on airway, breathing, and circulation (ABCs), ensuring that life-threatening issues are addressed first before delving into detailed history taking.[6] This progression allows providers to build on initial vital sign stabilization, using historical insights to refine ongoing management and prepare for handoff to higher-level care, thereby optimizing outcomes in dynamic emergency contexts.[7]Historical Development
Origins
The SAMPLE mnemonic emerged during the 1970s and 1980s as a key component of U.S. Emergency Medical Services (EMS) training programs, coinciding with the formalization of paramedic education following federal initiatives to professionalize prehospital care. The Highway Safety Act of 1966 and the Emergency Medical Services Systems Act of 1973 spurred the development of standardized curricula for emergency medical technicians (EMTs) and paramedics, emphasizing efficient patient assessment in resource-limited settings. Within these programs, SAMPLE provided a structured approach to gathering essential patient history, addressing the need for quick, reliable information during emergencies.[9][10] A major influence on this emergence came from military medicine and trauma care systems, where rapid history-taking had long been vital for triaging casualties under combat conditions. Lessons from the Vietnam War, including the use of helicopter evacuations and forward medical support, informed civilian EMS protocols, adapting battlefield techniques to urban and rural emergency responses. Paramedic training drew directly from these military practices, prioritizing concise questioning to identify immediate risks like allergies or recent intake amid time pressures.[11][12] The SAMPLE mnemonic first appeared in EMS training materials during this period of curriculum development, positioning it as an accessible tool for novice providers and facilitating consistent history collection in diverse scenarios.Standardization and Adoption
The SAMPLE history mnemonic was formally incorporated into the American College of Surgeons' Advanced Trauma Life Support (ATLS) program upon its introduction in 1980, as part of the secondary survey to guide focused history-taking in trauma patients.[4] This standardization provided emergency clinicians with a structured approach to elicit critical patient information, emphasizing its role in initial assessment protocols. Similarly, the Prehospital Trauma Life Support (PHTLS) program, developed in 1982 by the National Association of Emergency Medical Technicians (NAEMT) in collaboration with the American College of Surgeons' Committee on Trauma, integrated SAMPLE into its curriculum as a key component of the secondary assessment, adapting ATLS principles for prehospital providers.[13][14] By the 1990s, SAMPLE gained widespread adoption through national certification standards in the United States, including those of the National Registry of Emergency Medical Technicians (NREMT), which aligned with the National EMS Education Standards to mandate its use in patient history assessment for EMT and paramedic training.[15] Internationally, the mnemonic was integrated into EMS curricula via the global dissemination of ATLS and PHTLS programs, taught in over 80 countries and influencing prehospital protocols beyond North America.[16] Refinements occurred through periodic updates to these standards, such as the 2009 and 2021 revisions of the National EMS Education Standards, which maintained SAMPLE while enhancing emphasis on its application in diverse clinical scenarios.[17] Evidence from studies supports the impact of SAMPLE's adoption on assessment quality, with structured history-taking protocols like those in ATLS and PHTLS associated with improved diagnostic accuracy and reduced errors in emergency care.[18] Additionally, audits of documentation compliance post-implementation show significant gains in completeness and accuracy of patient histories, contributing to better continuity of care in EMS systems.[19]Detailed Components
Signs and Symptoms
In the SAMPLE history framework, the "S" component focuses on signs and symptoms, which encompass both objective observations by the healthcare provider and subjective reports from the patient to identify the chief complaint. Signs are measurable or observable indicators, such as elevated heart rate, wheezing, or visible deformities, while symptoms include the patient's personal descriptions of their condition, like pain or nausea. This initial assessment helps establish the primary issue prompting medical attention.[1] To elicit detailed information, providers often expand on the chief complaint using the OPQRST mnemonic, which systematically explores the onset (when the symptom began and what triggered it), provocation/palliation (factors that worsen or relieve it), quality (the nature of the sensation, such as sharp or dull), radiation (whether it spreads to other areas), severity (rated on a 0-10 scale), and time (duration and frequency). For instance, probing questions might include "What were you doing when the pain started?" for onset, "What makes it better or worse?" for provocation/palliation, and "Where does it hurt most, and does it go anywhere else?" for location and radiation. These questions guide a structured interview, ensuring comprehensive capture of the patient's experience without leading the response.[20] Clinically, signs and symptoms are critical for prioritizing life-threatening conditions during triage, as they signal potential emergencies requiring immediate intervention. Severe chest pain, for example, may indicate a cardiac event like myocardial infarction, elevating triage priority to level 2 in systems like the Emergency Severity Index (ESI), where it prompts rapid evaluation alongside vital signs such as heart rate over 100 bpm or oxygen saturation below 90%. Similarly, neurological deficits, including sudden confusion, weakness, or slurred speech, can denote stroke or other deficits, necessitating level 1 or 2 prioritization to mitigate brain damage. By focusing on these elements, providers can differentiate urgent issues from less acute ones, informing timely treatments like oxygen administration or transport decisions.[21]Allergies
In the SAMPLE history, the "Allergies" component focuses on identifying patient hypersensitivities to medications, foods, environmental factors, supplements, insects, or latex to prevent adverse reactions during treatment.[1][3] Common reactions include localized responses such as rashes or hives, as well as severe systemic events like anaphylaxis involving swelling, difficulty breathing, or hypotension.[22][23] Healthcare providers typically initiate questioning with targeted inquiries, such as "Are you allergic to any medications?" followed by broader prompts like "Do you have any allergies to foods, insects, environmental substances, or latex?" to elicit a complete profile.[1] Further details are obtained by asking "What happens when you are exposed?" to characterize the reaction's severity, onset, and symptoms, enabling differentiation between true allergies and intolerances.[3] This structured approach ensures rapid identification of risks in time-sensitive emergency scenarios.[1] The primary implications of documenting allergies guide therapeutic decisions by promoting avoidance of known triggers and preparation for potential emergencies. For instance, a reported penicillin allergy, affecting approximately 10% of emergency department patients, prompts selection of alternative antibiotics to avert anaphylaxis, though many such labels are unverified and may lead to broader-spectrum drug use with associated risks.[22][24] Similarly, latex allergies necessitate non-latex alternatives for gloves and equipment to prevent contact dermatitis or systemic reactions during procedures.[25] In cases of exposure, readiness for epinephrine administration is essential, as it is the first-line treatment for anaphylaxis to reverse life-threatening symptoms.[23] Overall, this component enhances patient safety by informing personalized care plans that mitigate hypersensitivity risks.[3]Medications
The Medications component of the SAMPLE history focuses on gathering a comprehensive account of the patient's current and recent pharmacological regimen to inform emergency treatment decisions. This includes prescription medications, over-the-counter (OTC) drugs, herbal supplements, and vitamins, with details on dosage, frequency, route of administration, formulation, and adherence or compliance.[26][27][1] Key questions in this assessment typically include: "What medications are you currently taking, including any OTC products, supplements, or herbals?" and "How often do you take them, in what dose, and are you taking them as prescribed?" These inquiries help verify the full regimen by cross-referencing patient reports with available sources such as pill bottles or pharmacy records, while probing for recent changes, start/stop dates, and barriers to compliance like cost or forgetfulness.[2][26][1] This information is crucial for identifying polypharmacy risks, where multiple drugs increase the potential for adverse interactions or errors, as seen in emergency department settings where up to 67% of inpatients have medication discrepancies. For instance, beta-blockers may mask symptoms of hypoglycemia, complicating assessments in diabetic patients, while contraindications like aspirin use in bleeding disorders can guide avoidance of certain interventions.[26][2][28] It also supports medication reconciliation by establishing a best possible medication history (BPMH), reducing unintentional variances in care transitions and enhancing patient safety.[27] Non-compliance or incorrect dosing can exacerbate presenting complaints, underscoring the need for thorough documentation of adherence.[1] This component briefly intersects with the allergies section to flag potential reactions but prioritizes pharmacological details over immunological history.[2]Past Medical History
The past medical history component of the SAMPLE assessment focuses on gathering information about the patient's prior health conditions to provide context for their current presentation, emphasizing relevant chronic and historical factors rather than exhaustive details.[1] This section typically includes inquiries into chronic diseases such as diabetes, hypertension, cancer, cardiac or respiratory disorders, and arthritis, as well as the dates of diagnosis, treatments received, and any ongoing impacts.[29] It also covers past surgeries, hospitalizations, and immunizations, noting details like procedure types, dates, complications, and vaccination status or reactions.[29] A standard inquiry in this component might be, "Do you have any ongoing medical conditions or past surgeries?" to elicit targeted responses that highlight baseline health status.[1] This information helps clinicians identify pertinent risks, such as the five-fold increased stroke risk associated with atrial fibrillation, which informs anticoagulation decisions and prognosis.[30] Similarly, knowledge of immunocompromised states, often from chronic conditions or immunizations history, guides infection control precautions to mitigate higher vulnerability to severe outcomes in healthcare settings.Last Oral Intake
The "L" in the SAMPLE history mnemonic refers to the patient's last oral intake, which involves gathering details about the timing and nature of their most recent consumption of food, fluids, or oral medications.[3] Clinicians typically ask targeted questions such as "When did you last eat or drink something?" and "What did you have to eat or drink?" to elicit this information, ensuring a focused assessment of recent intake patterns.[31] This component also prompts inquiry into whether the intake aligns with the patient's normal habits, helping identify deviations that may signal underlying issues.[1] Key elements assessed include the approximate time since the last intake—often categorized as hours ago—and the type of substance consumed, such as solid food, liquids, or alcohol, which can influence immediate care decisions.[3] For instance, recent ingestion of a large meal or alcohol heightens the relevance of this detail, as it may affect procedural planning.[31] Oral medications taken with food or drink are also noted here, providing context for potential interactions or absorption timing.[1] In clinical applications, last oral intake informs risks associated with interventions like intubation, where recent full intake elevates aspiration potential by increasing gastric contents that could enter the airway.[3] It also aids in evaluating dehydration status, as prolonged absence of fluid intake may necessitate rapid rehydration measures during transport or treatment.[1] For patients with diabetes, this assessment highlights hypoglycemia risk if recent food intake has been minimal, guiding timely glucose checks and administration.[31] Overall, these details contribute briefly to understanding broader nutritional status without overlapping into chronic history.[3]Events Leading Up
The "Events Leading Up" component of the SAMPLE history focuses on reconstructing the sequence of circumstances immediately preceding the patient's current medical event or injury, providing essential context for clinicians in emergency and critical care settings. This involves gathering details on the timeline, activities, and external factors at the onset, often obtained from the patient, witnesses, or bystanders if the patient is unable to communicate. For instance, in trauma cases, it includes the mechanism of injury, such as a fall from height or a motor vehicle collision, which helps assess the force and direction of impact to predict potential injuries like fractures or internal bleeding.[32] In non-trauma scenarios, it captures environmental influences, such as exposure to chemicals in a poorly ventilated space or high-energy activities on a hot day, which may indicate triggers like heatstroke or dehydration.[3][33] To elicit this information, healthcare providers use targeted probing questions, such as "What were you doing when this started?" or "What happened just before the symptoms began?" These open-ended inquiries encourage a narrative response that outlines the progression of events, including any witnesses present and relevant environmental details. In simulation-based studies of critical care assessments, incorporating these questions into structured tools like the Checklist for Early Recognition and Treatment of Acute Illness and Injury (CERTAIN) has shown no increase in cognitive load while improving the efficiency of history-taking when repeated across team members.[3][4] This approach ensures a chronological story that avoids overlap with other SAMPLE elements, emphasizing immediacy over long-term background. The utility of this component lies in identifying potential triggers or patterns that guide diagnosis and initial management. For example, a trauma mechanism involving high-speed impact may prompt immediate imaging for spinal injuries, while exertional onset during physical activity could signal cardiac ischemia, such as angina, by linking the event to increased myocardial demand.[32][33] By highlighting these connections—briefly tying into observed symptoms without delving into their description—it enables providers to prioritize interventions, such as stabilizing a patient post-fall or ruling out environmental toxins.[3] This focused reconstruction enhances risk stratification in prehospital and hospital settings, ultimately supporting better outcomes in acute care.[4]Applications and Usage
Prehospital Emergency Care
In prehospital emergency care, the SAMPLE mnemonic serves as a structured tool for emergency medical services (EMS) providers to rapidly collect essential patient history during out-of-hospital scenarios, enabling informed treatment decisions under time-sensitive conditions. This approach is particularly vital in ambulances and at incident scenes where resources are limited, and providers must prioritize life-saving interventions while gathering contextual information to guide care. By focusing on key elements such as signs and symptoms, allergies, medications, past medical history, last oral intake, and events leading up, SAMPLE helps bridge immediate assessment with ongoing management until hospital transfer.[1] SAMPLE is integrated into standard EMS protocols following scene safety and the primary survey, which addresses airway, breathing, circulation, and other immediate threats. In the Prehospital Trauma Life Support (PHTLS) program, endorsed by the National Association of Emergency Medical Technicians (NAEMT), it forms a core component of the secondary survey to systematically obtain patient history after stabilizing critical issues. This sequence ensures that EMS personnel, including paramedics and EMTs, can efficiently identify underlying conditions or contraindications to interventions without delaying transport.[13][34] Adaptations of SAMPLE are essential for challenging cases in the field. For unresponsive patients, providers obtain information through bystanders, family members, or available records, focusing on observable details like recent events or known allergies to avoid treatment delays. In pediatric emergencies, the mnemonic is modified by directing questions to parents or guardians, emphasizing age-specific factors such as recent meals or developmental history to tailor care appropriately. These modifications maintain the tool's utility across diverse patient presentations.[1] By promoting a consistent framework, SAMPLE contributes to more accurate preliminary diagnoses and better alignment with hospital care, ultimately supporting improved patient outcomes in prehospital settings.[1]Hospital and Clinical Settings
In hospital and clinical settings, the SAMPLE history serves as a structured framework for gathering essential patient information during emergency department (ED) triage and initial physician evaluations. This mnemonic facilitates rapid assessment of symptoms, allergies, medications, past medical history, last oral intake, and events leading up to the presentation, enabling clinicians to prioritize care in resource-rich environments. It is particularly valuable for non-trauma patients, where it is integrated into checklists like CERTAIN to support timely recognition of acute illness during the primary survey.[4] The SAMPLE history is often expanded with data from electronic health records (EHRs), which provide access to prior diagnoses, test results, and comprehensive patient profiles to supplement verbal or initial interviews. This integration enhances the depth of the assessment by incorporating historical data that may not be immediately available from the patient. Furthermore, it is routinely combined with vital signs and laboratory results to form a more complete clinical picture, as seen in simulation-based evaluations where SAMPLE elements are choreographed alongside ABCDE assessments. It is embedded in training protocols such as those in the American College of Surgeons' Advanced Trauma Life Support (ATLS) and Pediatric Advanced Life Support (PALS) programs.[4] Incorporating SAMPLE into standardized handover processes from prehospital emergency medical services improves accuracy by ensuring key elements like allergies and medications are consistently communicated, reducing information loss and errors during transitions to the ED. ED studies demonstrate that such standardized reporting systems lead to shorter provider times from care initiation to disposition, with one analysis showing a reduction in ED length of stay from 297 to 265 minutes post-implementation. These outcomes contribute to more efficient patient flow in facility-based care, paralleling but distinct from prehospital applications.[35][36]Variations and Related Tools
AMPLE Mnemonic
The AMPLE mnemonic is a trauma-focused adaptation of the SAMPLE history-taking tool, designed to streamline the collection of critical patient information in emergency settings where injury mechanisms dominate the clinical picture. Developed within the framework of the Advanced Trauma Life Support (ATLS) protocol by the American College of Surgeons, it originated in surgical training programs to enable rapid preoperative assessments, ensuring key details are obtained efficiently amid time-sensitive interventions.[37] This structure supports the secondary survey phase of trauma care, following initial stabilization, by prioritizing data that informs immediate management decisions like surgical risks or resuscitation needs.[38] The components of AMPLE are tailored for trauma contexts:- A (Allergies): Identifies any hypersensitivity to medications, latex, foods, or environmental agents that could complicate treatment, such as anesthesia administration.[37]
- M (Medications): Documents current prescriptions, with particular emphasis on anticoagulants, antiplatelets, or drugs influencing hemodynamics and bleeding.[39]
- P (Past Medical History): Reviews prior illnesses, surgeries, chronic conditions, or pregnancy status that may affect injury response or care planning.[38]
- L (Last Oral Intake): Records the timing and content of the most recent meal or fluids to evaluate risks like aspiration during intubation or delays in surgical procedures.[37]
- E (Events/Environment Related to Injury): Captures the mechanism of injury—such as falls, motor vehicle collisions, or penetrating trauma—and environmental details like weather, protective gear, or scene hazards to guide diagnostic and therapeutic priorities.[40]