Handling Bleeps Efficiently
On-call doesn’t feel stressful because patients are complex.
It feels stressful because:
everyone wants you at the same time.
Within 10 minutes you might get:
- “Doctor can you review chest pain?”
- “Can you prescribe fluids?”
- “Patient confused”
- “Need cannula”
- “Rewrite drug chart”
- “Family wants update”
If you react to each bleep immediately, you will:
- walk all night
- achieve very little
- miss sick patients
- feel constantly behind
The goal is NOT to answer every bleep instantly.
The goal is:
Triage first. Move second.
Control the bleeps — don’t let them control you.
First rule (most important)
Never walk to a ward without information.
Always assess urgency first.
A 20-second phone conversation can save 20 minutes of unnecessary walking.
Step 1 — Slow down and ask questions
When the bleep goes off, don’t rush.
Call back calmly and ask focused questions.
Always ask:
- What exactly is the problem?
- What are the observations?
- NEWS score?
- When did this start?
- Are they stable right now?
- What do you need me to do?
This instantly tells you:
🔴 urgent
🟠 semi-urgent
🟢 routine
Without this, you’re guessing.
Guessing is unsafe.
Step 2 — Categorise immediately (traffic light method)
Mentally label every call.
🔴 RED — go now
Drop everything.
Examples:
- chest pain
- hypotension
- hypoxia
- reduced GCS
- seizures
- active bleeding
- “looks really unwell”
- “I’m very worried”
If a nurse sounds worried → treat as RED.
Do not delay.
🟠 ORANGE — soon
Needs review within 30–60 minutes.
Examples:
- rising NEWS
- AKI
- abnormal bloods
- new confusion
- pain issues
- IV access
- fluids review
These wait until all RED jobs done.
🟢 GREEN — routine
Safe to batch or delay.
Examples:
- discharge summaries
- rewriting charts
- routine bloods
- paperwork
- non-urgent prescriptions
- family updates
These are not night emergencies.
They can wait hours.
And that’s okay.
Step 3 — Batch your jobs
Big efficiency hack most juniors miss.
Don’t run ward-to-ward randomly.
Instead:
✔ finish everything on one ward
✔ then move to the next
Example:
❌ Bad:
Ward A → Ward C → Ward B → Ward A
✔ Good:
Ward A (all jobs) → Ward B → Ward C
Less walking
Less brain switching
Less stress
Much faster
Step 4 — Don’t be afraid to say “after”
Very important mindset.
It is completely safe to say:
“I’m with an unwell patient — I’ll come after.”
You are not being rude.
You are prioritising safely.
Trying to please everyone immediately = unsafe care.
Good nurses understand this.
Step 5 — Keep one master list
Every time someone bleeps:
Write it down.
Do NOT rely on memory.
At 3am you will forget.
Always:
- write job
- ward
- priority
Then decide order calmly.
Chaos reduces when everything is on paper.
Step 6 — Avoid “ping-ponging”
Ping-pong = running back and forth all night.
Example:
- go for cannula
- get bleeped
- leave halfway
- start something else
- forget first job
This creates:
- incomplete tasks
- mental fatigue
- stress
Finish one task properly before switching (unless RED).
Multitasking feels efficient but is actually slower.
Step 7 — Control interruptions when reviewing sick patients
When assessing an unwell patient:
It’s okay to:
- silence phone briefly
- ask nurse to hold calls
- finish A–E properly
Half-reviewing a sick patient because of interruptions is dangerous.
Safety first. Bleeps second.
Step 8 — Reprioritise regularly
Every hour ask:
- Who is sick now?
- Any new REDs?
- What actually matters next?
Priorities change constantly.
Reassessing keeps you focused.
Real NHS examples
Without triage
Walk to rewrite chart → meanwhile chest pain patient waiting → unsafe
With triage
Chest pain first → paperwork later → safe
Same tasks. Different order. Huge difference.
Common junior mistakes
❌ walking without asking questions
❌ treating everything as urgent
❌ starting paperwork early
❌ not writing jobs down
❌ running randomly between wards
❌ trying to “clear bleeps” instead of prioritising
These create stress, not the workload itself.
Senior doctor mindset
Calm registrars don’t move faster.
They:
- ask better questions
- group jobs
- ignore routine noise
- focus only on sick patients
Efficiency is about decisions, not speed.
Simple bleep algorithm
When bleeped:
1️⃣ Call back
2️⃣ Ask obs + problem
3️⃣ RED / ORANGE / GREEN
4️⃣ Write it down
5️⃣ Batch jobs logically
That’s it.
Simple. Safe. Effective.
Take-home concept
Bleeps are information, not instructions.
You decide the priority.
Not the bleep.
If you triage properly and batch your jobs, on-call feels organised instead of chaotic.
Control the bleeps — don’t let them control you.
