Prescription of red cell concentrates by emergency physicians

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Faria,João Carlos Pina
Publication Date: 2020
Other Authors: Cansian,Bianca, Arruda,Éric Edmur Camargo, Victorino,Camila Augusta, Szulman,Alexandre
Format: Article
Language: eng
Source: Revista da Associação Médica Brasileira (Online)
Download full: http://old.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0104-42302020000400466
Summary: SUMMARY OBJECTIVE To evaluate the adequacy of the prescription of red cell concentrates by emergency physicians. METHODS A cross-sectional study based on the survey of transfusion requests records completed by emergency physicians, from May/2018 to April/2019, in an emergency hospital. Adequacy in the indication, volume, and subtype (filtered, irradiated, and washed) of prescribed erythrocytes were evaluated. To compare the qualitative data, we used the χ2 test. The significance level adopted was 5%. RESULTS One thousand and twenty-two transfusions were evaluated. The indication, volume, and subtypes were correct in 72.7%, 45.9%, and 81.6% respectively. Transfusion in symptomatic patients presented superior adequacy when compared to asymptomatic individuals with significant statistical difference (indication: 79,6% vs 67.2%, p <0.001; Volume: 63.5% vs 31.7%, p <0.001; subtype: 85.3% vs 78.7%, p 0.006). Among clinical situations, there were more errors in sepsis (39.7%) and pneumonia (36.3%). More than half of the prescriptions presented excessive volume, raising the risk of circulatory overload, observing that the mean age was 60.6 years. The specific analysis of the prescribed subtypes showed adequacy of 17.9% in the filtered, 1.7% in the irradiated, and none in the washed. Thirty transfusions should have been filtered, but the prescriber did not request the subtype. CONCLUSION One hypothesis for the observed inaccuracies is inadequate medical training on the subject, both in undergraduate and medical residency, associated with a lack of continuing education on transfusion protocols. The transfusion Committee received the results of this study with a proposal for continuing education measures on transfusion hemotherapy.
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spelling Prescription of red cell concentrates by emergency physiciansErythrocyte transfusionBlood transfusionEmergency treatmentPrescriptionsTransfusion medicineSUMMARY OBJECTIVE To evaluate the adequacy of the prescription of red cell concentrates by emergency physicians. METHODS A cross-sectional study based on the survey of transfusion requests records completed by emergency physicians, from May/2018 to April/2019, in an emergency hospital. Adequacy in the indication, volume, and subtype (filtered, irradiated, and washed) of prescribed erythrocytes were evaluated. To compare the qualitative data, we used the χ2 test. The significance level adopted was 5%. RESULTS One thousand and twenty-two transfusions were evaluated. The indication, volume, and subtypes were correct in 72.7%, 45.9%, and 81.6% respectively. Transfusion in symptomatic patients presented superior adequacy when compared to asymptomatic individuals with significant statistical difference (indication: 79,6% vs 67.2%, p <0.001; Volume: 63.5% vs 31.7%, p <0.001; subtype: 85.3% vs 78.7%, p 0.006). Among clinical situations, there were more errors in sepsis (39.7%) and pneumonia (36.3%). More than half of the prescriptions presented excessive volume, raising the risk of circulatory overload, observing that the mean age was 60.6 years. The specific analysis of the prescribed subtypes showed adequacy of 17.9% in the filtered, 1.7% in the irradiated, and none in the washed. Thirty transfusions should have been filtered, but the prescriber did not request the subtype. CONCLUSION One hypothesis for the observed inaccuracies is inadequate medical training on the subject, both in undergraduate and medical residency, associated with a lack of continuing education on transfusion protocols. The transfusion Committee received the results of this study with a proposal for continuing education measures on transfusion hemotherapy.Associação Médica Brasileira2020-04-01info:eu-repo/semantics/articleinfo:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersiontext/htmlhttp://old.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0104-42302020000400466Revista da Associação Médica Brasileira v.66 n.4 2020reponame:Revista da Associação Médica Brasileira (Online)instname:Associação Médica Brasileira (AMB)instacron:AMB10.1590/1806-9282.66.4.466info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccessFaria,João Carlos PinaCansian,BiancaArruda,Éric Edmur CamargoVictorino,Camila AugustaSzulman,Alexandreeng2020-06-10T00:00:00Zoai:scielo:S0104-42302020000400466Revistahttps://ramb.amb.org.br/ultimas-edicoes/#https://old.scielo.br/oai/scielo-oai.php||ramb@amb.org.br1806-92820104-4230opendoar:2020-06-10T00:00Revista da Associação Médica Brasileira (Online) - Associação Médica Brasileira (AMB)false
dc.title.none.fl_str_mv Prescription of red cell concentrates by emergency physicians
title Prescription of red cell concentrates by emergency physicians
spellingShingle Prescription of red cell concentrates by emergency physicians
Faria,João Carlos Pina
Erythrocyte transfusion
Blood transfusion
Emergency treatment
Prescriptions
Transfusion medicine
title_short Prescription of red cell concentrates by emergency physicians
title_full Prescription of red cell concentrates by emergency physicians
title_fullStr Prescription of red cell concentrates by emergency physicians
title_full_unstemmed Prescription of red cell concentrates by emergency physicians
title_sort Prescription of red cell concentrates by emergency physicians
author Faria,João Carlos Pina
author_facet Faria,João Carlos Pina
Cansian,Bianca
Arruda,Éric Edmur Camargo
Victorino,Camila Augusta
Szulman,Alexandre
author_role author
author2 Cansian,Bianca
Arruda,Éric Edmur Camargo
Victorino,Camila Augusta
Szulman,Alexandre
author2_role author
author
author
author
dc.contributor.author.fl_str_mv Faria,João Carlos Pina
Cansian,Bianca
Arruda,Éric Edmur Camargo
Victorino,Camila Augusta
Szulman,Alexandre
dc.subject.por.fl_str_mv Erythrocyte transfusion
Blood transfusion
Emergency treatment
Prescriptions
Transfusion medicine
topic Erythrocyte transfusion
Blood transfusion
Emergency treatment
Prescriptions
Transfusion medicine
description SUMMARY OBJECTIVE To evaluate the adequacy of the prescription of red cell concentrates by emergency physicians. METHODS A cross-sectional study based on the survey of transfusion requests records completed by emergency physicians, from May/2018 to April/2019, in an emergency hospital. Adequacy in the indication, volume, and subtype (filtered, irradiated, and washed) of prescribed erythrocytes were evaluated. To compare the qualitative data, we used the χ2 test. The significance level adopted was 5%. RESULTS One thousand and twenty-two transfusions were evaluated. The indication, volume, and subtypes were correct in 72.7%, 45.9%, and 81.6% respectively. Transfusion in symptomatic patients presented superior adequacy when compared to asymptomatic individuals with significant statistical difference (indication: 79,6% vs 67.2%, p <0.001; Volume: 63.5% vs 31.7%, p <0.001; subtype: 85.3% vs 78.7%, p 0.006). Among clinical situations, there were more errors in sepsis (39.7%) and pneumonia (36.3%). More than half of the prescriptions presented excessive volume, raising the risk of circulatory overload, observing that the mean age was 60.6 years. The specific analysis of the prescribed subtypes showed adequacy of 17.9% in the filtered, 1.7% in the irradiated, and none in the washed. Thirty transfusions should have been filtered, but the prescriber did not request the subtype. CONCLUSION One hypothesis for the observed inaccuracies is inadequate medical training on the subject, both in undergraduate and medical residency, associated with a lack of continuing education on transfusion protocols. The transfusion Committee received the results of this study with a proposal for continuing education measures on transfusion hemotherapy.
publishDate 2020
dc.date.none.fl_str_mv 2020-04-01
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dc.relation.none.fl_str_mv 10.1590/1806-9282.66.4.466
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dc.publisher.none.fl_str_mv Associação Médica Brasileira
publisher.none.fl_str_mv Associação Médica Brasileira
dc.source.none.fl_str_mv Revista da Associação Médica Brasileira v.66 n.4 2020
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