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RASS — Richmond Agitation-Sedation Scale

Standardized sedation assessment for ICU patients. Score range: −5 (unarousable) to +4 (combative). Target is typically 0 to −2.

Select RASS Level

Select a RASS level to see interpretation.
+4 to +1Agitated — consider causes (pain, delirium, anxiety)
0Alert and calm — ideal for most patients
−1 to −2Light sedation — typical ICU target
−3 to −5Deep sedation — evaluate for over-sedation

Disclaimer: Nur zu Bildungszwecken. Kein Ersatz für klinisches Urteilsvermögen.

Über dieses Tool

What Is the RASS?

The Richmond Agitation-Sedation Scale (RASS) is a validated 10-point scale developed at Virginia Commonwealth University for measuring sedation level in ICU patients. Published by Sessler et al. in 2002, it ranges from −5 (unarousable) through 0 (alert and calm) to +4 (combative). RASS has become the most widely used sedation scale in critical care and is a core component of the ABCDEF ICU liberation bundle.

Why It Matters

Over-sedation (RASS −3 to −5) is independently associated with increased mortality, prolonged mechanical ventilation, and higher delirium rates. The 2018 PADIS guidelines recommend targeting light sedation (RASS 0 to −2) over deep sedation for most critically ill adults. RASS-targeted sedation protocols reduce sedative exposure and improve patient outcomes.

🔑 Klinische Praxistipps

  • RASS is step 1 of the ABCDEF bundle: Assess, both SAT & SBT, Choice of sedation, Delirium monitoring, Early mobility, Family engagement.
  • If RASS is −4 or −5, the patient cannot be assessed for delirium with CAM-ICU — document "unable to assess."
  • Agitation (RASS +1 to +4) should trigger a differential: pain, delirium, anxiety, ventilator dyssynchrony, full bladder, ETT malposition.
  • RASS has excellent inter-rater reliability (κ = 0.91) between nurses and physicians.

Key References

  • Sessler CN, et al. The Richmond Agitation-Sedation Scale. Am J Respir Crit Care Med. 2002;166(10):1338-1344.
  • Ely EW, et al. Monitoring sedation status over time in ICU patients: reliability and validity of the RASS. JAMA. 2003;289(22):2983-2991.

Formel zuletzt überprüft: Februar 2026