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Jane

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Posts posted by Jane

  1. I read recently that H&H equilibrates within 15 minutes after a unit transfusion. I found it in "A Compendium of Transfusion Practice Guidelines" published by ARC in 2010. The same reference says to measure the platelet count 10-60 minutes after transfusion. It doesn't state an amount of time for PT/PTT following plasma.

    Hope this helps!

    Jane

  2. OMG~! I just found another manual on the TraQ website with flow charts for most standard blood bank processes (developed with Lucia Berte). If anyone wants to check it out for tons of flow-charted goodness: www.traqprogram.ca

    To find the flow charts (site path): Resources-Manuals-TraQ/PBCO Manuals-Technical Operations Manual-scroll down to processes.

    Enjoy!

  3. Our blood supplier currently only produces pre-storage leukoreduced units (ARC Carolinas region) but prior to that we did the filters at bedside. At the time, we had it defined which patient populations would receive LR but I can't remember which now. Later, we looked at other suppliers that had both products available but our medical director thought that universal leukoreduction was an improvement in service and going back to units that weren't pre-storage leukoreduced would be a step back. It has made I think a huge difference in the # of febrile reactions.

  4. Welcome Jamie. I second that there are people with tons of experience on here with a passion for blood banking. I have learned so many things on here and have gotten advice or ideas so many times.

  5. I have done both- used an outside company and performed it myself. For our implementation of Sunquest several years ago, we hired an outside company to perform all the vendor scripts- basically making sure the system did everything Sunquest said it would. I then performed a validation of every procedure the way I wrote it for the computer system to make sure it would work as we expected it to. Future upgrade validations were not usually so time consuming so I did those myself.

    I agree with David- if you do it yourself, it will help you understand how it works better and will let you know that it all works as it should.

  6. Is everyone using the complement control cells:

    TRM.40210 DAT Phase II

    When performing an antiglobulin test with anti-C3 antiglobulin reagents, C3-coated red blood

    cells are used as a control in all negative antiglobulin tests.

    and where are you getting them from? I'm not happy with my current vendor (they don't come on a predictable standing order) and I just saw that Hemobioscience has them. Any experience with that vendor?

    Thanks!

  7. Hi All,

    I am back to the Blood Bank after a 5 year hiatus (and so glad to be back :)). In the new facility I'm at, we have a copy of Lucia Berte's 2007 Transfusion Service Manual of SOPs, Training Guides, and Competence Assessment Tools. Has anyone else read this book? I'm really liking the way she advises organizing a procedure manual- really with flow charts that describe your processes. For example, you'd have a flow chart for a type and screen, another for antibody ID, etc. I'm thinking this approach may help the generalists (everyone that works in blood bank except me) find what they need quickly. Does anyone set their manuals up like this?

    Any thoughts? Ideas?

    Thanks,

    Jane

  8. Hi All,

    I used to be fairly active on this forum until I left the Blood Bank in 2007. I'm now happy to be at a new facility as the Blood Bank Technical Specialist and so happy to be back in the Blood Bank where I belong. I look forward to contributing and learning more from everyone's experience!

    Jane

  9. Our policy is that anytime a reference tech has to be called in (night or weekend) we get the approval of our pathologist. This keeps us from having to "eat" all these excess charges when patients do not really warrant this and also keeps the pathologist in the loop.

  10. I don't think blood bank has to be separate but ours is. We did have a glass door that closed us off from the rest of the lab (with glass windows all around). We decided to take down the door since we liked it more open but occasionally wish we could close it because of noise. Some techs are bothered by the noise if working on a complex patient where they really need to concentrate and others don't seem to be bothered at all.

  11. I have been using a very generic form that listed the procedure changes and asked the techs to sign when procedures were updated. Lately I'm trying to decide how this can be better accomplished. I know that some of you have a training SOP and a competency document for each SOP. Do you do a new one when a procedure is updated that includes everything (obviously you would for new employees but I'm talking about those already trained) or do you just make ones for the already trained people that only covers the updates.

    For example (for those of you that didn't make any sense for), I am updating our crossmatch procedure to include a second blood typing for those not on file- so would the techs that have already been trained on the current procedure, need to go through all the training again or is there a shortened version that you would use with just current employees???

    Please help!!

  12. We started sending ours out to our ref lab a few years ago (Quest, now Labcorp) because we had so few and were also doing more surveys than patients. If we have a positive screen, we call the OB doc and suggest they give the patient an extra shot of Rhogam until we get the results back. We have only had one patient that needed more Rhogam and in that case, the office called the patient back in and gave her the other 2 shots.

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