OpiCalc Logo

OpiCalc

1121 Clinical Tools

Logo
OpiCalc
AKPS — Australia-modified Karnofsky Performance StatusBODE Index (Palliative context)CAM-S (Confusion Assessment Method - Severity)CPOT (Critical-Care Pain Observation Tool)Death Rattle Scoring (Victoria)Distress ThermometerEdmonton Symptom Assessment System (ESAS-r)FAST Scale (Dementia)IPOS (Integrated Palliative Outcome Scale)Memorial Symptom Assessment Scale (MSAS)Menten ScoreMorphine Equivalent Daily Dose (MEDD)Nursing Delirium Screening Scale (Nu-DESC)Opioid Risk Tool (ORT)PAINAD ScalePalliative Performance Scale (PPSv2)Palliative Prognostic (PaP) ScorePalliative Prognostic Index (PPI)Respiratory Distress Observation Scale (RDOS)Richmond Agitation-Sedation Scale (RASS-PAL)Seattle Heart Failure Model (SHFM)e-PaP Score
OpiCalc Logo

OpiCalc

Open-access clinical infrastructure. Built to the standard every clinician deserves — fast, private, and free.

Zero data stored
Always free
Our mission & transparency

Get in Touch

Tool request, clinical feedback, or partnership inquiry — we read everything.

WhatsApp feedback
Email us
Partnership inquiry

© 2026 OpiCalc • Calculated Care

ProtocolsAboutPrivacyTerms

In Recent Clinical News

Scanning Medical Journals

No new significant updates or guidelines matching this topic were found today. We will check again soon.

Death Rattle Scoring (Victoria)

Multi-Modal End-of-Life Triage • Victoria & Back's Validated

Ready for Assessment

Combine audibility, congestion, and family distress to guide terminal care.

Guidelines & Evidence

Clinical Details

Section 1

When to Use

Clinical Utility

Assessment of upper airway "noisy breathing" in the actively dying patient.
Monitoring for family and listener distress (resonance with feelings).
Guidance for initiating non-pharmacological (repositioning) or pharmacological (anticholinergics) interventions.
Education and normalization of end-of-life phenomena for bereaved families.
Section 2

Formula & Logic

Back’s Audibility Scale (2001)

0No Rattle
1Audible only close to the patient
2Audible at the foot of the bed
3Audible in the doorway / outside the room

Victoria Respiratory Congestion Scale (VRCS)

0 = NoneNo audible secretions
1 = MildOccasional rattling; audible only when listening closely
2 = ModeratePersistent rattling; audible at bedside
3 = SevereLoud rattling; audible from a distance

Family Distress Measure (Shimizu et al., 2014)

Evaluates the subjective experience of bereaved families. High distress is often linked to the belief that the patient is "suffocating" or "drowning," despite clinical evidence showing a lack of patient-side respiratory distress.
Section 3

Pearls/Pitfalls

Distress vs. Physiology

Consensus indicates that death rattle is NOT distressing to the affected patient. It is primarily a listener-distress phenomenon. Campbell (2018) emphasizes that normalization through analogies (like snoring) is often more effective than medication.

Key Nuances

Type 1 vs Type 2: Salivary (Type 1) is more responsive to anticholinergics than bronchial/edema-based (Type 2) secretions.
Listener Impact: Fagan et al. (2025) note that distress is common among both informal carers and healthcare professionals, necessitating targeted educational interventions.
Hydration Link: Subcutaneous hydration has been associated with increased occurrence of death rattle in certain cohorts.
Section 4

Next Steps

Assuaging Listener Distress

01
Normalize: Use analogies like "snoring" or "liquid at the bottom of a glass through a straw."
02
Reposition: Implement postural drainage via side-lying positioning.
03
Medicate: Use anticholinergics (Glycopyrrolate preferred) primarily if the sound is causing significant family distress.
04
Educate: Explain that the sound indicates profound weakness and the inability to swallow, not respiratory agony.
Section 5

Evidence Appraisal

Direct Study Access

Assuaging Listener Distress (Campbell, 2018) Scoping Review of Impact (Fagan et al., 2025) Death Rattle Measure: PsycTests (Shimizu et al., 2014)

Historical Context

The Victoria Hospice Society developed the VRCS to move beyond binary "yes/no" assessments, allowing palliative teams to track the trajectory of secretions and evaluate the efficacy of anticholinergic therapy over time.

Last Comprehensive Review: 2026

Related Palliative Care Tools

AKPS — Australia-modified Karnofsky Performance Status
BODE Index
CAM-S
CPOT
Distress Thermometer
e-PaP Score
Edmonton Symptom Assessment System
FAST Scale
IPOS
Memorial Symptom Assessment Scale
Have feedback about this calculator?Let us know.