Reducing the Number of Insufficient Blood Draw Specimens for Coagulation Testing
To report the efforts of our laboratory to reduce
quantity-not-sufficient (QNS) specimens via several methods and to
directly measure the effect of expired collection tubes on the amount of
blood that can be drawn.
A study tracked the number
of QNS venous-blood specimens per month received by our coagulation
laboratory from March 2008 to December 2012. Interventions involved
communications that informed nurses and phlebotomists how to avoid
drawing QNS specimens and floor sweeps, in which laboratory staff
searched for and removed expired vacuum-based blood-collection tubes
(VBCTs) from inpatient hospital floors. Also, we assessed 11 healthy
donors to determine the amount of blood that could be drawn into expired
VBCTs.
During the study period, the rate of QNS
specimens dropped from a mean of 0.7% to 0.3%. In expired VBCTs
collected from healthy donors, we observed a statistically significant
difference in the amount of blood drawn into nonexpired vs expired VBCTs
(P <.001). Also, there was a negative relationship between the
number of months that the VBCT had been expired and the amount of blood
that could be drawn into the VBCTs (P <.001). For every month that
VBCTs were expired, the amount of blood drawn decreased by approximately
1.8 mm (0.1 mL), using linear regression analysis.
This
study strongly suggests that expired VBCTs consistently and
progressively yield QNS specimens. Methods to reduce blood draws from
expired VBCTs may include communications promoting proper blood draw
technique, floor sweeps to remove expired VBCTs, and improved inventory
management.
Read more:
Quality Improvement in the Coagulation Laboratory
Source: Medscape
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