Global Journal of Transfusion Medicine (Jan 2023)
Prospective audit of blood transfusion practices among nurses and role of education and intervention at a tertiary care hospital
Abstract
Background and Objectives: Periodical internal audits evaluate the process flow of transfusion which arrests the spectrum of adverse events .The objective of the study was to provide evidence that blood is being ordered, handled, and administered according to transfusion guidelines and to highlight the deviations with the secondary objective of improving knowledge and practices in nursing officers. Methods: Nursing officers were audited on 50 patients each in P1 and P2 phase. Training of 243 nursing staff was done after P1 phase. Training comprised education and interventions over 45 days – 18 didactic lectures and 36 bedside classes. Nurses were audited both before and after the completion of the training. Results: One hundred and forty-five nurses had knowledge and practice score in between 11 and 15 in P1 which improved to 243 (100%) in P2. Transfusion order for one patient was not written in P1, whereas 100% compliance was seen in P2. Noncompliance in taking consent for transfusion improved from 5 to 1 in P2. Blood request error and sample labeling error reduced from 8% to 0% and 4% to 0%, respectively, in P2. Sample labeling was inappropriate in 2 patients in P1 which improved to nil in P2. Checking of vital signs check and intravenous cannula patency improved from 96% to 98%. Crosscheck of packed red blood cell nursing officers before transfusion reduced from 8% to 0% and from 30% to 2% among medical officer (P < 0.05). Delay in the initiation of transfusion, reduced from 7 to 2 patients. Conclusion: Timely audit of transfusion practices reduces mistakes and errors hence improved patient care.
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