Literature DB >> 21251464

Improved traceability and transfusion safety with a new portable computerised system in a hospital with intermediate transfusion activity.

María Jose Uríz1, Maria Luisa Antelo, Saioa Zalba, Nazaret Ugalde, Esther Pena, Andrea Corcoz.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: A retrospective study carried out on medical records of transfused patients in our hospital in 2002 revealed that manual identification procedures were insufficient to offer satisfactory traceability. The aim of this study was to assess adequacy of transfusion traceability and compliance with proper identification procedures after introducing an electronic identification system (EIS) for transfusion safety.
MATERIALS AND METHODS: The chosen EIS (Gricode(®)) was set up. Traceability was calculated as the percentage of empty blood units used returned to the Transfusion Service, compared to the number of supplied units. Compliance in the Transfusion Service was calculated as the percentage of electronic controls from dispatch of blood components/transfusion request performed, compared to the total number of transfused units. Compliance in the ward was calculated as the percentage of electronic controls from sample collection/transfusion performed, compared to the total number of samples collected.
RESULTS: This retrospective study showed that only 48.0% of the medical records were free of inaccuracies. After the implementation of the EIS (2005-2008), traceability was always above 99%. Percentage of monthly compliance from 2006 to 2008 was always above 93%, showing a significant trend to increase (p<0.05). The mean compliance in this period was higher in the Transfusion Service (97.8 ± 0.7 SD) than in the ward (94.9 ± 2.4 SD; p<0.001). Compliance in the ward was lowest when the system was first implemented (87.9% in April 2006) after which it progressively increased. No errors in ABO transfusions were registered.
CONCLUSION: After implementation of the EIS, traceability and compliance reached very high levels, linked to an improvement in transfusion safety.

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Year:  2011        PMID: 21251464      PMCID: PMC3096861          DOI: 10.2450/2011.0044-10

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Blood Transfus        ISSN: 1723-2007            Impact factor:   3.443


  28 in total

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Journal:  Blood Transfus       Date:  2009-07       Impact factor: 3.443

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2.  The State and Trends of Barcode, RFID, Biometric and Pharmacy Automation Technologies in US Hospitals.

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