Call a consult well.
The two minutes of prep that make the call short, the 5 Cs of Consultation, SBAR for the phone call, one specific question instead of "can you come see this?", curbside vs formal, and the pitfalls that earn a reputation.
Reviewed June 2026 · verify against current guidelines
Do Not Call Cold
Earn the consultant's time
The fastest way to lose a consultant is to call before you know your own patient. Two minutes of prep makes the call short and makes you look ready.
Have these in front of you
| Know the patient | One-liner, the active problem, the timeline. See and examine the patient first. |
|---|---|
| Pull the data | Latest vitals, pertinent labs, imaging, and the relevant meds, open on screen. |
| Write the question | One sentence. If you cannot finish it, you are not ready to call. |
| Check urgency | Decide if this is emergent, urgent, or routine. It sets your tone and theirs. |
The 5 Cs of a Consult
A validated structure for handing off a question between physicians. Run them in order, every time.
Contact → Communicate → Core question → Collaborate → Close
| Contact | Reach the right person. Give your name, role, team, callback number, and the patient up front. |
|---|---|
| Communicate | A focused story, not the whole chart. Lead with the one-liner and why you are calling. |
| Core question | State the single specific question. Make it impossible to miss. |
| Collaborate | Discuss together. Agree on the plan, timing, and who does what. |
| Close the loop | Read back the plan. Confirm urgency and how you will reach each other. |
Ask One Real Question
Specific beats vague every time
“Can you see this patient?” wastes everyone's time. Tell them what you actually want.
Weak vs strong asks
| Weak | “Renal, can you come see this AKI?” |
|---|---|
| Strong | “58F, day 2 of a cardiorenal AKI, creatinine up from 1.1 to 2.4 despite diuresis. Asking whether she needs renal replacement now or if we can keep diuresing.” |
A strong ask names
- Who the patient is, in one line.
- The specific decision you are stuck on.
- What you have already tried or considered.
Structure It With SBAR
Say it in this order
| Situation | Who you are, who the patient is, and the one-line reason you are calling. |
|---|---|
| Background | The pertinent history, timeline, and relevant data. Brief. |
| Assessment | What you think is going on and how sick the patient is. |
| Recommendation | Your core question, or what you are asking them to do. |
Curbside or Formal?
Pick the right channel
| Curbside | A quick, general question with no chart review and no documented recommendation. |
|---|---|
| Formal consult | The consultant sees the patient, reviews the chart, and writes a note. |
Go formal when
- The answer will change management or needs to be in the chart.
- It is patient-specific, not a textbook question.
- There is real risk, complexity, or medicolegal weight.
- You would be asking them to act on data they cannot see.
Etiquette and Pitfalls
What gets you a reputation
- Calling before you have seen or examined the patient yourself.
- No clear question — the “consult dump.”
- Consulting for something you could look up in two minutes.
- Paging then vanishing. Give a callback number and stay reachable.
- Hiding the urgency, or crying emergent for a routine question.
- Never closing the loop, then acting on a plan you half-heard.
Sources
Verify against current guidelines and local protocol before acting.
- Kessler CS et al. A prospective, randomized, controlled study demonstrating a novel, effective model of transfer of care between physicians: the 5Cs of consultation. Acad Emerg Med 2012;19(8):968.
- Kessler C et al. The 5Cs of consultation: training medical students to communicate effectively in the emergency department. J Emerg Med 2015;49(5):713.
- Goldman L, Lee T, Rudd P. Ten commandments for effective consultations. Arch Intern Med 1983;143(9):1753.
- Salerno SM et al. Principles of effective consultation: an update for the 21st-century consultant. Arch Intern Med 2007;167(3):271.
- Institute for Healthcare Improvement. SBAR Tool: Situation-Background-Assessment-Recommendation.
- Conventions vary by program and service. Match your team and your consultants.
Downloads
Every card for this topic — carousels and tables, print-ready for the wards or for sharing.
