Ensuring timely completion of type and screen testing and the verification of ABO/Rh status for elective surgical patients

A blood bank can provide compatible blood for an elective surgical procedure, provided a blood sample is received by the laboratory with sufficient time to allow pretransfusion testing and acquire enough compatible red blood cell units. With the push for same-day admission surgical procedures, a pat...

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Veröffentlicht in:Archives of pathology & laboratory medicine (1976) 2007-04, Vol.131 (4), p.576-581
Hauptverfasser: Saxena, Sunita, Nelson, Janice M, Osby, Melanie, Shah, Mrugesh, Kempf, Raymond, Shulman, Ira A
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container_end_page 581
container_issue 4
container_start_page 576
container_title Archives of pathology & laboratory medicine (1976)
container_volume 131
creator Saxena, Sunita
Nelson, Janice M
Osby, Melanie
Shah, Mrugesh
Kempf, Raymond
Shulman, Ira A
description A blood bank can provide compatible blood for an elective surgical procedure, provided a blood sample is received by the laboratory with sufficient time to allow pretransfusion testing and acquire enough compatible red blood cell units. With the push for same-day admission surgical procedures, a patient's pretransfusion blood sample is often collected the morning of surgery. However, if blood is needed, compatible units might not be immediately available. To define and improve the process of completing presurgical/preadmission type and screen testing and verifying the ABO/Rh status of scheduled surgical patients before they receive a transfusion. A list of surgical procedures that might necessitate blood transfusion was created. A checklist was used to ensure that the preoperative clinic nurse collects a baseline pretransfusion blood sample for type and screen testing from patients scheduled for a listed procedure. A new pretransfusion specimen was received on the day of surgery, if needed, so that a current specimen would be available for compatibility testing and to verify the accuracy of the patient's ABO/Rh status in case blood was requested. During the 1-year study period, 666 patients qualified for baseline type and screen testing. Cholecystectomy was the most commonly scheduled surgery. In 99% of cases, a baseline type and screen specimen was received in the laboratory at least 1 day before surgery. The interval between the preoperative clinic visit and date of surgery varied from same day (6 patients) to 3 months. Timely receipt of a presurgical specimen for type and screen testing and verification of a patient's ABO/Rh status can be ensured when clinical services collaborate and when the hospital blood utilization committee provides oversight to improve compliance.
doi_str_mv 10.5858/2007-131-576-ETCOTA
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source MEDLINE; Allen Press Miscellaneous; EZB-FREE-00999 freely available EZB journals
subjects ABO Blood-Group System
Agglutination
Ambulatory care
Antibodies
Blood
Blood banks
Blood Grouping and Crossmatching - methods
Blood Grouping and Crossmatching - standards
Blood Specimen Collection - methods
Blood Specimen Collection - standards
Blood Transfusion
Collaboration
Diagnostic Tests, Routine - methods
Diagnostic Tests, Routine - standards
Elective Surgical Procedures
Hospitals
Humans
Laboratories
Management
Medical care
Medical screening
Patients
Quality management
Rh-Hr Blood-Group System
Surgeons
Surgery
Surgery, Elective
Time Factors
title Ensuring timely completion of type and screen testing and the verification of ABO/Rh status for elective surgical patients
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