1 / 16

Prepared by John Grant-Casey Project Manager

National Comparative Audit of the use of blood in Primary, Elective, Unilateral Total Hip Replacement. Prepared by John Grant-Casey Project Manager. North East RTC. November 2007. The National Comparative Audit Programme. Background information.

sabine
Download Presentation

Prepared by John Grant-Casey Project Manager

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. National Comparative Audit of the use of blood in Primary, Elective, Unilateral Total Hip Replacement Prepared by John Grant-Casey Project Manager North East RTC November 2007

  2. The National Comparative Audit Programme Background information • A series of audits designed to look at the use and administration of blood and blood components • Open to all NHS Trusts and Independent hospitals in the UK • Collaborative programme between NHS Blood and Transplant & Royal College of Physicians • Endorsed by the Healthcare Commission

  3. Blood use in Hip Replacements Why was this audit necessary? • Orthopaedic surgery accounts for 10% of red cells used in hospital. • Studies have demonstrated wide variation in practice in the use of red cells • for total hip replacement surgery. • Despite the availability of national guidelines for red cell transfusion, several audits • have shown that a significant amount (10 – 15%) of red cell transfusions could be • avoided in the perioperative period. • In view of the recognized risks of transfusion and the decreasing availability of donor • blood, every effort should be made to minimize inappropriate transfusions. • Health Service Circular 2002/009(BBT2) sets out a programme of action for Chief • Executives of NHS Trusts to avoid unnecessary use of red cells in clinical practice

  4. Blood use in Hip Replacements What were the audit aims & objectives? • The collection of sufficient credible data from a large and representative sample • of hospitals • The production of a report that is widely disseminated to those stakeholders who • have the ability to influence and improve the practice of using blood for this • procedure • The commencement of a dialogue which will lead to meaningful multidisciplinary • discussion on the appropriateness of blood transfusions in patients undergoing • this procedure • A reduction in the inappropriate use of red blood cells in patients undergoing this • procedure

  5. Blood use in Hip Replacements Participation We invited • 183 NHS hospitals • 187 Independent hospitals Who took part • 149 (81%) NHS hospitals sent information • 102 (55%) Independent hospitals sent information Number of patients audited • Nationally = 7465 RTC = 359

  6. Blood use in Hip Replacements Methodology • Methodology – the audit sample • Data collected for 40 consecutive hip replacement operations • All patient ages were eligible

  7. Blood use in Hip Replacements The Audit Results – Key performance indicators 2 key performance indicators were used - % patients transfused and average number of units transfused per patient

  8. Blood use in Hip Replacements The Audit Results – Key performance indicators 2 key performance indicators were used - % patients transfused and average number of units transfused per patient

  9. National Blood use in Hip Replacements Patients having a pre-operative Hb taken

  10. Blood use in Hip Replacements Patients going for surgery with an Hb <12 g/dl

  11. Blood use in Hip Replacements Patients having a post-operative pre-transfusion Hb taken

  12. Blood use in Hip Replacements Transfused patients having a pre-transfusion Hb of <8 g/dl

  13. Blood use in Hip Replacements % Patients possibly over-transfused

  14. Blood use in Hip Replacements Recommendations • In order to minimize the likelihood of a patient receiving a donor blood transfusion, pre-operative anaemia should be corrected as far as possible. • Hospitals should have a written policy for identification and management of anaemia in pre-assessment clinics. • Surgeons seeing patients at initial consultation must ensure that patients have a full blood count, and that anaemic patients are investigated and steps taken to correct the anaemia before surgery. • General Practitioners referring patients for surgery should take measures to optimize the haemoglobin. • Every hospital should have a transfusion policy to guide transfusion in the peri- / post-operative period, based upon one or more of the following: · Symptoms · Haemoglobin concentration · Estimated blood loss • Trusts should ensure that their prescribers are aware that it is not necessary to transfuse patients who are asymptomatic, not bleeding and have a haemoglobin of >8g/dl. • In order to avoid over-transfusion, single-unit transfusions may be appropriate. Hospitals should review the number of units transfused against their patients’ post-transfusion Hb at regular intervals. • Nationally, orthopaedic representation at Hospital Transfusion Committees needs to be improved and more consistent attendance encouraged.

  15. Blood use in Hip Replacements Acknowledgements • Project team: Hari Boralessa, Karen Madgwick, Keith Tucker, Sandy Kidd, Andy Mortimer, John Grant-Casey, and David Dalton • Hospital staff who collected the audit data

  16. National Comparative Audit of the use of blood in Primary, Elective, Unilateral Total Hip Replacement Prepared by John Grant-Casey Project Manager North East RTC November 2007

More Related