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BldBnker

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  1.    BB Gal reacted to a post in a topic: Ortho Vision Not Reading Barcodes
  2.    Bet'naSBB reacted to a post in a topic: Ortho Vision Not Reading Barcodes
  3.    BldBnker reacted to a post in a topic: Ortho Vision Not Reading Barcodes
  4.    RRay reacted to a post in a topic: Ortho Vision Not Reading Barcodes
  5. We had issues with our Visions not reading barcodes also. We did learn that the Vision needs approximately 4 mm of a white margin on either side of the barcode to read. We adjusted our barcode printer and that enabled the Visions to read the label. Not sure if anyone at Ortho told you that. I think it was our service rep that let us know that hint! Good luck!
  6.    BldBnker reacted to a post in a topic: Post-partum workup
  7.    BldBnker reacted to a post in a topic: Helmer Plasma Thawer-water change frequency
  8.    BldBnker reacted to a post in a topic: Antibody identification art or science
  9.    BldBnker reacted to a post in a topic: Blood administration
  10.    BldBnker reacted to a post in a topic: Workstation Recommendations
  11.    BldBnker reacted to a post in a topic: Emergency Issue / MTP
  12.    BldBnker reacted to a post in a topic: Grifols analyzer users: Roll call!
  13.    BldBnker reacted to a post in a topic: Fetal Screen
  14. Done! I wish him the best of luck!
  15.    donellda reacted to a post in a topic: Ortho Panel A and B quality control
  16. I would also like for someone to share their SOP's with me. We are about to implement the Ortho Vision Swift instruments after 14 years of Immucor Echo instruments. Huge change for us and the generalists that cover the Blood Bank on alternate shifts. I appreciate any help! Thank you!
  17.    Baby Banker reacted to a post in a topic: Ortho Panel A and B quality control
  18.    John C. Staley reacted to a post in a topic: Ortho Panel A and B quality control
  19. John C. Staley, in my 30+ years also, we have never QC'd panels and have never been cited )we are AABB, CAP and FDA inspected).
  20. Sonya Martinez, it is an old COBE 2991 (I think they are now made by Terumo). It is programmed to wash a whole unit, a pedi/quad unit, or do a 2-L wash for IgA deficient patients. Our machine is probably at least 30 years old. We just spike the unit and spike a 1 L bag of injectable saline using the wash bags that are used on the machine. The machine takes care of it! Here's the link: https://www.terumobct.com/2991
  21. To clarify, we sterile dock a packed cell into quads and wash one quad at a time when a transfusion is needed. We try to dedicate one packed cell to an infant (which decreases exposure) but will use a unit for more than one infant if needed. This helps prevent wastage. Our overall wastage is very low here. Also, we don't transfuse too many infants at our facility (maybe 1 baby per month). Really premature/sick infants are transferred to a local children's hospital for a higher level of care.
  22.    Malcolm Needs reacted to a post in a topic: Infant transfusion units
  23. We use O Neg, CMV neg, irradiated units for our babies but we wash them with a blood washer (an old COBE 2991). I know...we are dinosaurs and yes, I am FDA inspected because of it. Washing removes the potassium and anticoagulant (which can cause citrate toxicity in small premature infants).
  24.    Malcolm Needs reacted to a post in a topic: Professor David Anstee.
  25. So sorry to hear this. My condolences.
  26. I have used Immucor Echo instruments since 2008. I love them! There are still some issues with cold antibodies and weakly positive DAT's causing positive screens, as with any newer methodology. Unfortunately, we are going to be going to the Ortho Visions due to corporate decisions. I'm trying to be optimistic but am thankful to be in the latter part of my career (3 years to go!).
  27.    slsmith reacted to a post in a topic: Rule out Anti-K
  28. Sonya Martinez, Where are you going to get the COVID-19 convalescent plasma? I had a physician inquire about that this morning. I don't think our normal providers will have that as it is still considered "experimental." Thanks!
  29. I would appreciate you sharing with me also! I am not fond of our form we use now. Thanks!
  30. There have been many improvements over my career. Now, of course, we have barcode scanners being used by our phlebotomists which have greatly decreased the number of mislabeled samples. We also have Epic BPAM for transfusions. However, we are all human and we still have the rare specimen error, usually in a hurried/emergent situation (when SOP's sometime go out the window, unfortunately). A bedside ABO slide type would have saved the patient in Texas that recently passed from an ABO HTR.
  31. That was my point. Yes, if the sample is the same type as the patient in the bed but wrong patient's sample, it won't catch WBIT. However, it has saved us several ABO HTR's in my career (30+ years). I call that a good catch!
  32. We perform at bedside slide blood type for confirmation before starting blood at the hospital where I work. A Blood Bank employee (Blood Bank Assistant/Transfusionist) takes the issued blood to the patient's bedside and participates in the starting of the transfusion with nursing personnel. The slide type is an extra layer of patient safety. Pre-transfusion testing is only as good as the quality of sample! We have caught wrong-blood-in-tube (mislabeled) samples this way. We also have computer confirmation with barcoding of units but that doesn't always catch WBIT samples.

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