Frontiers in Medicine (Sep 2023)

Clinical application of a fully automated blood collection robot and its assessment of blood collection quality of anticoagulant specimens

  • Chong Wang,
  • Meixiu Gu,
  • Jie Zhu,
  • Shuo Yang,
  • Wenjia Tang,
  • Zizhong Liu,
  • Baishen Pan,
  • Beili Wang,
  • Wei Guo,
  • Wei Guo,
  • Wei Guo,
  • Wei Guo

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fmed.2023.1251963
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10

Abstract

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Background and objectivesTo investigate the application of intelligent puncture blood collection robots in anticoagulated blood specimens, the satisfaction of subjects with the two blood collection methods, and the feasibility of intelligent blood collection devices to replace manual blood collection methods in clinical work.Materials and methodsA total of 154 volunteers from Zhongshan Hospital Fudan University were recruited to compare the test results of anticoagulant blood samples between blood collection robot and manual blood collection, a questionnaire was used to inquire about the volunteers’ feelings about the two blood collection methods; the blood collection data of 6,255 patients willing to use the robot for blood collection were collected to analyze the success rate of blood collection.ResultsThe blood collection robot is superior to manual specimen collection in terms of volume and pain of specimen collection, and the puncture success rate is 94.3%. The anticoagulated blood specimens collected by the robot had 11 indexes statistically different from the results of manual blood collection, but the differences did not affect the clinical diagnosis and prognosis.ConclusionThe intelligent robotic blood collection is less painful and has better acceptance by patients, which can be used for clinical anticoagulated blood specimen collection.

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