Triaging should not require any subject-matter expertise. You are only being asked to do a cursory evaluation of the question, like a field medic would triage patients.
We have a detailed guide to Triage here; as you can see, it says:
The primary goal of Triage is to quickly sort potentially-problematic posts into categories that can be routed elsewhere.
You have three main options:
"Looks OK": You can think of this as the field medic's equivalent of a green tag. The patient is healthy, everything is fine, nothing needs to be done.
"Requires Editing": You can think of this as the field medic's equivalent of a yellow tag. The patient has a chance to survive, but only if he gets some edits. Note that these are edits that a regular community member can perform, not edits that need to be made by the asker (for these, see the next category).
"Unsalvageable": You can think of this as the field medic's equivalent of a red tag. The patient is in dire condition and desperately needs desperate attention. This is for questions that need to be closed and/or deleted (for any number of different reasons).
The fourth option—one that you don't get access to as a field medic—is "Skip". This does exactly what it says on the label, and it's meant to be used in cases where you are unsure.
If you really feel like you lack the subject-matter expertise to fairly evaluate a question in Triage, then just "Skip" it.
But we're not going to be adding a subject-matter filter to Triage, because subject-matter expertise should not be required in order to correctly Triage questions, any more than the field medic who triages patients needs to be able to heal all of them.