1 / 22

Blood Transfusion

Blood Transfusion. Medical Staff 2011. Regulations. Medicines and Healthcare Products Regulatory Agency (MHRA) EU Directive 2005/61/EC (100% compliance) NHSLA Induction Annual Update NPSA competencies (3 yearly).

Download Presentation

Blood Transfusion

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Blood Transfusion Medical Staff 2011

  2. Regulations • Medicines and Healthcare Products Regulatory Agency (MHRA) • EU Directive 2005/61/EC (100% compliance) • NHSLA • Induction • Annual Update • NPSA competencies (3 yearly)

  3. Intranet http://webapps/intranet/departments/blood_transfusion/default.asp Link person Bi monthly newsletter Blood Transfusion Manual www.transfusionguidelines.org.uk Remember if you are making a service change which involves blood transfusion it may need to go through change control. (MHRA requirement). Therefore inform us ASAP. Blood Warmers: Ward 34 and Theatres (UHCW/RSX) Where to find information

  4. Requesting Blood • MSBOS – Maximum Surgical Blood Ordering Schedule http://webapps/elibrary/index.aspx • Pre optimise your patients • Electronic issue • Avoid wastage

  5. Patient Identification • Ensure the correct blood sample is taken from the correct patient by identifying and completing patient’s full birth name, hospital/NHS number, date of birth, gender • Where appropriate ask the patient to state the above details and check electronically issued armband • If not appropriate check electronically issued armband and if possible check ID with relative • Do not multi task when obtaining blood samples • There will be a procedure in every Trust for identifying unknown male and females

  6. Order of Draw and Inversions • Every Trust has a collection system • To ensure a quality sample the correct order of draw must be observed • All BD vacutainer tubes require immediate mixing following collection • Avoid the use of needle and syringe for taking blood samples • Hand label the blood samples clearly, accurately, legibly at patient’s side

  7. Cross Match Form

  8. Prescribing blood and blood products • Reason for transfusion • Identity of prescriber GMC number or name • Ensure accurate documentation. • Remember you may be called to recount why you prescribed or administered blood • Consent (Verbal) • One unit versus two • Maximum transfusion time 3 ½ hours • Each unit volume differs • Generally increases Hb by 0.8 g

  9. Indications for RBC transfusion: Medicine • Acute bleeding: urgent X-match • Chronic anaemia, if no treatable cause AND symptomatic AND Hb < 8g/dL (or 9g/dL, if age >75) • Transfusion-dependant Pts, keep Hb >10 • Radiotherapy: keep Hb > 10 • Chemotherapy Pts; keep Hb > 9

  10. Indications for RBC transfusion: Surgical • Anaemia: if not easily remediable in other ways • Bleeding • Pre-op ordering: Maximum Surgical Blood Ordering Schedule (MSBOS). Tariff. Less can be ordered. More if justified • Intra-op and Post-Op: know Hb before transfusing.

  11. Indications for FFP transfusion • Generalised coagulation factor deficiency (DIC, severe liver disease) • Trauma pt bleeding heavily: may use RBC:FFP 1:1 and later RBC:FFP:Plt 1:1:1 • Warfarin OD: Vitamin K & ‘Prothrombinase complex’ Remember if defrosted can utilise up to 24 hours later if returned to Blood Bank

  12. Indications for platelet transfusion • Not ‘Glue’ • Check FBC before giving • Plt < 70 and bleeding / surgery • Plt < 10 - maybe prophylaxis • Assess function where possible (TEG, PFA)

  13. Indications for cryoprecipitate • Not ‘Glue’ • Factor VIII, von Willebrand Factor (but safer concentrates available) • Fibrinogen depletion (DIC, hyperfibrinolysis, liver disease) • Fibrinogen < 1g/L

  14. Blood costs

  15. Administration • 2 trained staff must check patient against prescription and blood label which is affixed to the bag of blood (luggage tag) • Positively identify your patient. (Electronically issued wristband/verbal) • Check vital signs before the transfusion is administered • Identify adverse reactions. (Patients must be visible throughout the transfusion). • If there is an anomaly, correct if possible before blood transfusion commences. i.e. Pyrexia • Complete the blood transfusion administration record. Start and stop times must be recorded • If patients are being transferred between departments and blood is in progress, they must be accompanied by a qualified nurse/Doctor if appropriate. • Dispose empty blood bags into the clinical waste stream once the blood has been AutoFated. (Partially full or full must be disposed of into a rigid container)

  16. Transfusion Reactions: Acute Haemolytic Reaction • ABO incompatible red cells, e.g. Group A into Group O patient (anti-A, anti-B) • Errors: 65% ward, 35% Lab • Patient & Sample ID • Pain (infusion site, back, chest), ‘sense of impending doom’, red urine • Shock, DIC, Renal failure • Death (10%)

  17. Long term side effects • Red cell antibodies:e.g. anti-c, Anti-Kell • HLA-sensitization (now rare) • Infection: Hepatitis B, C. CMV,HIV, Parvo, HTLV-1/2, malaria, syphilis, vCJD …... • Iron overload • Cant donate blood! Recent audit indicates only 19% of unconscious patients at UHCW were notified they had received blood during their hospitalisation

  18. Emergency Blood • O- • White form • Cool box • Retain skins and fate blood after the event • Record donation numbers in medical notes • Red Label • Fridges (O-) • Pathology Dept, (Main Fridge Blood Bank), 4th Floor, west Wing • Emergency Department • Main Theatres (Central) • Labour Ward Theatres (West Wing) • St. Cross (Rugby) Opposite Cedar ward

  19. Patients who refuse blood • Increasing • Policy: Really important however minor the procedure! • Intranet: Resources • All patients who refuse blood must complete paperwork • Jehovah Witness Liaison

  20. Wastage • If you don’t follow process i.e. utilise blood track blood will be wasted • Must be avoided • Can lead to limited UHCW blood stocks especially • O – ve, B –ve and platelets • Blood / products are expensive and a limited resource • Complete a blood wastage form (Found on the e-library or blood Transfusion Intranet site) • Fate must be recorded as wasted

  21. Contacts: • Janine Beddow: Modern Matron (Transfusion) X25470 Bleep 1287 • Janine.Beddow@uhcw.nhs.uk • Angela Sherwood: Transfusion Liaison Nurse X25469 Bleep 2280 • Angela.Sherwood@uhcw.nhs.uk • John Hyslop: Blood Bank Manager (Network) X25322 • John.Hyslop@uhcw.nhs.uk • Dr Nick Jackson: Consultant Haematologist (Network), Bleep 1750. Nicholas.Jackson@uhcw.nhs.uk • Dr Keith Clayton : Consultant Anaesthetist (HTC Chair). Bleep 1488 • Keith.clayton@uhcw.nhs.uk • Hayley Brace: Administration X25436 • Hayley.Brace@uhcw.nhs.uk

  22. Questions?

More Related