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  • Title: Appropriateness of transfusions of red cells, platelets and fresh frozen plasma. An audit in a tertiary care teaching hospital.
    Author: Metz J, McGrath KM, Copperchini ML, Haeusler M, Haysom HE, Gibson PR, Millar RJ, Babarczy A, Ferris L, Grigg AP.
    Journal: Med J Aust; 1995 Jun 05; 162(11):572-3, 576-7. PubMed ID: 7791642.
    Abstract:
    OBJECTIVE: To determine how current hospital practice for transfusions of red cells, platelets and fresh frozen plasma conformed with published criteria. DESIGN: Elaboration of criteria for transfusion from a review of the current literature; and analysis of the medical records of patients receiving transfusions of red cells (200), platelets (215), and fresh frozen plasma (260) during defined time periods in 1993. SETTING: A large tertiary care teaching hospital. OUTCOME MEASURES: Inappropriateness rates for transfusion episodes and numbers of individual units of blood products administered. RESULTS: Inappropriateness rates for transfusion episodes and numbers of individual units administered were 16% and 10% for red cells, 13% and 11% for platelets, and 24% and 16% for fresh frozen plasma (31% and 21% when transfusions for thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura were excluded). Red cells and fresh frozen plasma were used inappropriately most frequently in association with a surgical procedure; for platelets, it was their use for bleeding. In many of the transfusions deemed inappropriate, deficiencies of red cells, platelets and/or coagulation factors were documented, but the degree of deficiency did not meet the stringent appropriateness criteria. Twenty-six transfusions were deemed inappropriate because the indication was not documented in the medical record. CONCLUSIONS: Specific problem areas in which blood product use was inappropriate were identified. Guidelines for transfusion appropriateness, education of hospital staff, and a monitoring system to ensure adherence to the guidelines, are required.
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