Levels of Care Primary Secondary and Tertiary Framework
Key Points
- Primary care emphasizes prevention, early identification, and routine management.
- Secondary care addresses focused acute or specialty needs and stabilizes patient status.
- Tertiary care provides highly specialized and often intensive interventions for complex conditions.
- Safe care requires planned movement between levels with clear referral and return-to-primary pathways.
Pathophysiology
Levels of care represent a healthcare delivery design, not a biologic disease process. Patients move between levels based on complexity, acuity, and required expertise.
Care failures commonly occur at transition points when referral intent, treatment goals, and follow-up responsibilities are not clearly communicated.
Classification
- Primary care: Health promotion, prevention, screening, and routine chronic care.
- Secondary care: Specialist evaluation and management of more complex acute/chronic problems.
- Tertiary care: Advanced specialty or procedural care in high-capability settings.
- Transition pattern: Escalation for complexity, then de-escalation back to continuity care.
Nursing Assessment
NCLEX Focus
Prioritize where the patient should receive care now and what transition details are required for safety.
- Assess current acuity, stability, and urgency to determine care-level fit.
- Assess whether current setting can provide required diagnostics/interventions.
- Assess referral indications and urgency for specialist or tertiary services.
- Assess discharge/readiness factors for return to lower level with follow-up.
- Assess patient understanding of why transitions are occurring.
Nursing Interventions
- Coordinate timely referrals with complete clinical context and rationale.
- Clarify goals of each level and expected handoff outcomes.
- Educate patient/family about where to seek routine vs urgent vs specialized care.
- Confirm return pathway to primary care after specialty episodes.
- Document transition decisions and contingency instructions.
Transition Fragmentation
Escalating care without a clear return and follow-up plan increases readmission and missed-care risk.
Pharmacology
Medication regimens often change during secondary/tertiary episodes; reconciliation and clear post-transition instructions are essential before return to primary care.
Clinical Judgment Application
Clinical Scenario
A patient seen in primary care for worsening dyspnea requires urgent specialist intervention and possible procedural management.
Recognize Cues: Symptoms exceed routine management threshold. Analyze Cues: Secondary or tertiary resources are needed for definitive workup/treatment. Prioritize Hypotheses: Immediate safe escalation is priority. Generate Solutions: Arrange urgent referral and communicate risk details to receiving team. Take Action: Transfer with complete handoff and stabilization steps. Evaluate Outcomes: Specialized care is delivered, then follow-up is reconnected to primary care.
Related Concepts
- patient-care-coordination-interdisciplinary-referrals-and-case-management - Operational pathway for transitions.
- continuity-of-care-during-evaluation-phase - Ensures stable follow-through after level changes.
- nurse-licensure-compact-and-multistate-practice - Relevant when care transitions cross jurisdictions.
Self-Check
- What clinical factors most strongly determine escalation from primary to secondary care?
- Why must tertiary episodes include explicit return-to-primary planning?
- Which handoff elements prevent avoidable transition-related harm?