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Free tool

MEWS & NEWS2 Calculator.

Two bedside early warning scores in one place. Enter a set of vitals and get the aggregate score, exactly which parameters are driving it, the color-coded clinical-risk band, and the recommended escalation response. MEWS follows the original Subbe 2001 table still used widely in US hospitals; NEWS2 follows the Royal College of Physicians 2017 standard used across the NHS. Aggregate scores flag deterioration before it becomes a code — but they support your judgment, they don't replace it.

MEWS — 5 parameters (Subbe et al. 2001). Common US rapid-response trigger.

Temperature units:

Enter the vital signs above.

MEWS scoring table [1]

Parameter3210123
Systolic BP (mmHg)≤7071–8081–100101–199≥200
Heart rate (bpm)≤4041–5051–100101–110111–129≥130
Resp. rate (/min)<99–1415–2021–29≥30
Temperature (°C)<3535–38.4≥38.5
AVPUAlertVoicePainUnresp.

Aggregate score 0–4 across the five parameters. A MEWS ≥ 5 was associated with a markedly higher risk of death, ICU and HDU admission in the original validation [1]; many facilities trigger a rapid-response review at a total ≥ 4 or a score of 3 in any single parameter [2]. Always follow your own facility's trigger thresholds.

Disclaimer: Educational tool only — not a clinical decision-support device, not a diagnosis, and not a substitute for your assessment, your provider's orders, or your facility's policy. Early warning scores are a safety net, not a verdict: a low score never overrides clinical concern, and you should escalate any patient who worries you regardless of the number. Enter de-identified values only; nothing is stored or transmitted. Confirm the trigger thresholds your unit actually uses.

References

  1. Subbe CP, Kruger M, Rutherford P, Gemmel L. Validation of a modified Early Warning Score in medical admissions. QJM. 2001;94(10):521–526. doi:10.1093/qjmed/94.10.521. (Original MEWS table; score ≥5 linked to higher risk of death, ICU and HDU admission.)
  2. Royal College of Physicians. National Early Warning Score (NEWS) 2 — Chart 2: thresholds and triggers. London: RCP; 2017. rcp.ac.uk. (Single-parameter score of 3 = red score, urgent review — the principle many MEWS protocols also apply.)
  3. Royal College of Physicians. National Early Warning Score (NEWS) 2 — Chart 1: the NEWS scoring system. London: RCP; 2017. rcp.ac.uk. (Parameter point values used here, including SpO₂ Scale 1/2 and the +2 for supplemental oxygen.)
  4. Royal College of Physicians. National Early Warning Score (NEWS) 2: standardising the assessment of acute-illness severity in the NHS. Updated report of a working party. London: RCP; 2017. rcp.ac.uk. (Clinical-response thresholds: 0–4 low, 5–6 medium, ≥7 high.)

Thresholds and bandings above were transcribed directly from these primary sources. Your facility may use locally adapted triggers — those take precedence at the bedside.