Common Bleep Scenarios

On-call isn’t rare diagnoses.

It’s the same 20 problems… again and again.

Most bleeps fall into predictable patterns.

If you learn how to handle these confidently, 80% of your shift becomes much easier.

This guide focuses on:

👉 What you’ll actually get bleeped about at 2am — and what to do first

Not theory.
Not long differentials.
Just safe, practical action.


How to use this page

For any bleep:

Always:

1️⃣ Ask for observations
2️⃣ Get NEWS
3️⃣ Decide urgency
4️⃣ A–E at bedside
5️⃣ Treat first, diagnose later

Then use the quick guides below.



🔴 “Doctor, NEWS is high / patient looks unwell”

What this usually means

Undifferentiated deterioration.

Could be:

  • sepsis
  • hypoxia
  • bleeding
  • dehydration
  • anything

Treat as sick until proven otherwise.

What to do immediately

  • Go now
  • Full A–E
  • Oxygen
  • IV access
  • Bloods
  • Fluids if hypotensive
  • Escalate early

Common mistake

Trying to diagnose before stabilising.



🔴 “BP low” / Hypotension

Think first

Shock until proven otherwise.

Common causes:

  • sepsis
  • bleeding
  • dehydration
  • meds
  • cardiac

What to do

  • A–E
  • Repeat manual BP
  • 2 IV cannulas
  • Bloods + lactate
  • Fluid bolus
  • Check meds
  • Escalate if not improving

Red flags

SBP < 90 or not responding to fluids → call senior early



🔴 “Chest pain”

Think first

ACS until proven otherwise.

What to do

  • ECG immediately
  • obs
  • oxygen if needed
  • IV access
  • troponin
  • aspirin (if appropriate)
  • senior review

Never miss

  • ECG first, not bloods first

Time = myocardium



🟠 “Short of breath / low sats”

Common causes

  • pneumonia
  • COPD
  • PE
  • pulmonary oedema
  • asthma

What to do

  • A–E
  • oxygen
  • ABG if unwell
  • chest exam
  • CXR
  • treat cause (neb/diuretics/antibiotics)

Escalate if

Increasing oxygen needs or tiring



🟠 “Confused / delirious”

Think first

Delirium = underlying medical problem

Often:

  • infection
  • hypoxia
  • retention
  • constipation
  • meds
  • metabolic

What to do

  • A–E
  • glucose
  • urine check
  • bloods
  • review meds
  • treat cause

Common mistake

Calling psych before ruling out medical causes



🟠 “Temp 38.5 / ?sepsis”

Think first

Early sepsis until proven otherwise

What to do

  • A–E
  • Sepsis 6
  • blood cultures
  • antibiotics early
  • fluids
  • lactate
  • monitor closely

Golden rule

Antibiotics early > perfect diagnosis later



🟠 “Low urine output”

Common causes

  • dehydration
  • AKI
  • obstruction
  • sepsis

What to do

  • check fluid balance
  • bladder scan
  • bloods/U&E
  • fluids if dry
  • review meds
  • catheter if needed

Escalate if

Rising creatinine or persistent oliguria



🟠 “Glucose low/high”

Hypo

  • give glucose immediately
  • don’t wait

Hyper/DKA suspicion

  • ketones
  • VBG
  • start protocol
  • senior early if severe

Common mistake

Delaying treatment for labs



🟢 “Need cannula / bloods / fluids”

What to do

  • ask urgency
  • batch jobs by ward
  • don’t interrupt sick patient reviews

These are routine tasks unless unstable.



🟢 “Rewrite drug chart / TTO / discharge summary”

Reality

Admin, not emergency

Safe to delay

Night shift = patient safety, not paperwork perfection

Do last



🔴 “I’m worried about this patient”

This phrase is very important.

If an experienced nurse says this:

Treat as RED.

Even if obs look okay.

Clinical intuition from nurses is often very accurate.

Go see them.


Pattern you’ll notice

Most bleeps fit into:

  • airway/breathing
  • circulation
  • infection
  • confusion
  • pain
  • admin

Very few are rare or complex.

Confidence comes from handling these basics well.


Senior mindset

Good on-call doctors don’t memorise rare diagnoses.

They:

  • recognise sick early
  • use A–E
  • treat basics fast
  • escalate early

Same structure every time.

Simple. Safe. Effective.


Take-home concept

On-call medicine isn’t about being clever.

It’s about being systematic.

If you handle common bleeps calmly and consistently, the whole shift feels manageable.

Master the basics and 80% of nights become straightforward.

Rare problems are rare.

Common problems are common.

Be excellent at common.