We have reported it repeatedly to the lab manager, risk management, HR, called the corporate compliance hotline, and even followed the chain of command to the CEO of the hospital. I really am at a loss that they allow these mistakes to happen. I think the problem is that our immediate supervisor knows nothing of blood bank, and she tries to cover the mistakes up to a point. I don't know if this is because she doesn't know the severity of the mistakes, or if she does it for personal reasons. The tech making all the mistakes always blames them on someone else or just flat out denies that it was her work. I don't know how she can miss an antibody, turn out the wrong results, and sign her panel and still blame it on someone else. She blamed the last incident on the evening shift tech. She tried to say she told him to double check her Ag typing for c which is total crap. Even if she had told him to check it she shouldn't have turned out a result she wasn't 100% sure of or ordered screened units from the ARC reference lab. We are not AABB accredited anymore. We dropped them about 2.5 years ago. As far as I know nothing has been reported to the FDA. I do know in the case of her handing out the wrong unit of blood the nurse caught it at the bedside, so risk management said it wasn't a big issue (did this twice). To make things worse she handed out an A unit to a B patient on one, and the other patient had a E, c, and K and she handed out units from an unscreened patient. It's looking like reporting them to CAP, joint commission, or the FDA is about my only option. I don't care what situation it puts me in since I believe I am putting patient's lives first. We all make mistakes, but for as long as I have been there she's the only tech that's made a non-clerical error. Everyone puts the wrong armband number in the computer or scans the wrong specimen in every once in a while, but she makes these clerical errors daily with the major errors on top of them.