How rational is the crossmatching of blood in a pediatric emergency department?

被引:12
作者
GruppPhelan, J
Tanz, RR
机构
[1] CHILDRENS MEM HOSP,DIV GEN ACAD PEDIAT,CHICAGO,IL 60614
[2] CHILDRENS MEM HOSP,DIV PEDIAT EMERGENCY MED,CHICAGO,IL 60614
[3] NORTHWESTERN UNIV,SCH MED,DEPT PEDIAT,CHICAGO,IL 60611
来源
ARCHIVES OF PEDIATRICS & ADOLESCENT MEDICINE | 1996年 / 150卷 / 11期
关键词
D O I
10.1001/archpedi.1996.02170360030004
中图分类号
R72 [儿科学];
学科分类号
100202 ;
摘要
Objective: To determine if typed and crossmatched blood ordered in a pediatric emergency department (ED) is actually used for transfusion and if some ordering patterns are not cost-effective. Design: Retrospective medical record review. Emergency department records and blood bank logs were reviewed daily to identify patients who had a type and crossmatch (T&C) ordered; inpatient records were then reviewed. A priori diagnostic and patient care categories were determined. Physicians and nurses providing care were unaware of the study. Setting: An inner-city, tertiary care, pediatric trauma center ED. Patients: A consecutive sample of ED patients who had a T&C ordered from October 1, 1993, through January 31, 1994. Interventions: None. Main Outcome Measures: Outcome measures included age, general category of diagnosis, number of units of blood crossmatched and transfused within 7 days, hemoglobin concentration in the ED, surgical procedures in the operating room, and hospital charges for typed and crossmatched blood. For trauma patients, the Pediatric Trauma Score was recorded. The crossmatch-to-transfusion (WT) ratio was calculated for each diagnostic category (the typical WT ratio for US hospitals is 2). We calculated a new ratio, the patient-to-transfusion (P/T) ratio, to correct for the transfusion of numerous units of blood in a few patients, Results: Two hundred eighty-two patients had 468 U of blood typed and crossmatched. Fifty-six patients received a total of 110 U of blood. The mean hemoglobin concentration was 81 g/L for patients who received a transfusion and 117 g/L for patients who did not receive a transfusion (P<.001). The C/T ratio for all patients was 4.3. The P/T ratio for all patients was 5.3. Sixty-four surgery patients had 78 U of blood typed and crossmatched; 1 U of blood was transfused to 1 patient, yielding a C/T ratio of 78 and a P/T ratio of 64. Ninety-one units of blood were typed and crossmatched for 38 major trauma patients; 20 U of blood were transfused to 2 patients, 19 U were transfused to 1 patient with a Pediatric Trauma Score of 4, and 1 U was transfused to a patient with a Pediatric Trauma Score of 7, The C/T ratio for major trauma patients was 4.6, and the P/T ratio was 19. Forty-five children with ventriculoperitoneal shunt problems had 51 U of blood typed and crossmatched, but no blood was transfused, Children with sickle-cell disease had a C/T ratio of 2.2 and a P/T ratio of 3.3; those with cancer diagnoses had a C/T ratio of 1.6 and a P/T ratio of 1.3. During the if-month study period, the hospital charged $84 726 for these T&Cs. The charge for T&Cs never used for transfusion was $65 643 (77.5%). Conclusions: Most typed and crossmatched units of blood ordered in our pediatric ED were never used for transfusion. The C/T and P/T ratios were high for many-diagnostic categories, suggesting inefficient blood ordering and patient management, Transfusions were uncommon in children with the following problems: ventriculoperitoneal shunt malfunction, virtually all surgical diagnoses, cancer with a hemoglobin concentration greater than 105 g/L, and trauma patients with a Pediatric Trauma Score of greater than 7.
引用
收藏
页码:1140 / 1144
页数:5
相关论文
共 22 条
[1]  
*AM ASS BLOOD BANK, 1993, TECHN MAN, P591
[2]   UN-CROSS-MATCHED BLOOD FOR EMERGENCY TRANSFUSION - ONE YEARS EXPERIENCE IN A CIVILIAN SETTING [J].
BLUMBERG, N ;
BOVE, JR .
JAMA-JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN MEDICAL ASSOCIATION, 1978, 240 (19) :2057-2059
[3]  
BORAL LI, 1979, AM J CLIN PATHOL, V71, P578
[4]   TYPE AND SCREEN - SAFE ALTERNATIVE AND SUPPLEMENT IN SELECTED SURGICAL PROCEDURES [J].
BORAL, LI ;
HENRY, JB .
TRANSFUSION, 1977, 17 (02) :163-168
[5]  
BOYD PR, 1980, AM J CLIN PATHOL, V73, P649
[6]   OPTIMAL BLOOD ORDERING FOR EMERGENCY DEPARTMENT PATIENTS [J].
CLARKE, JR ;
DAVIDSON, SJ ;
BERGMAN, GE ;
GELLER, NL .
ANNALS OF EMERGENCY MEDICINE, 1980, 9 (01) :2-6
[7]  
DEJONGH DS, 1983, SURG GYNECOL OBSTET, V156, P326
[8]   INCREASED EFFICIENCY OF TRANSFUSION PRACTICE IN ROUTINE SURGERY USING PREOPERATIVE ANTIBODY SCREENING AND SELECTIVE ORDERING WITH AN ABBREVIATED CROSSMATCH [J].
DODSWORTH, H ;
DUDLEY, HAF .
BRITISH JOURNAL OF SURGERY, 1985, 72 (02) :102-104
[9]   THE ORDERING OF BLOOD FOR ELECTIVE GENERAL SURGICAL OPERATIONS [J].
FARMER, E ;
HAM, JM .
AUSTRALIAN AND NEW ZEALAND JOURNAL OF SURGERY, 1981, 51 (01) :68-71
[10]   RESUSCITATION OF TRAUMA PATIENTS WITH TYPE-SPECIFIC UNCROSSMATCHED BLOOD [J].
GERVIN, AS ;
FISCHER, RP .
JOURNAL OF TRAUMA-INJURY INFECTION AND CRITICAL CARE, 1984, 24 (04) :327-331