LACGH recognized by Canadian Blood Services for red blood cell stewardship

From left is Lennox and Addington County General Hospital's Dr. Nicola Matthews – Medical Director, Internal Medicine / Marie-France Paradis – Manager, Clinical Informatics and Clerical Services / Pam Hodgen – Charge Technologist, Laboratory / Diane Makin, Medical Laboratory Technologist / Dr. Pierre Robichaud – Medical Director, Acute Care. The staff were recognized for their efforts for reducing unnecessary blood transfusions. Submitted photo.

The following is a press release from Lennox and Addington County General Hospital

The Lennox and Addington County General Hospital (LACGH) has been recognized as a Choosing Blood Wisely Hospital by Choosing Wisely Canada and Canadian Blood Services for meeting national appropriateness benchmarks for red blood cell transfusions.

This national achievement symbolises the LACGH’s commitment to red blood cell stewardship and continuous quality improvement. The recognition also showcases the hospital’s leadership and ongoing efforts towards conservation and sustainability.

LACGH is among a select group of Hospitals that is making a difference for patients, donors and Canada’s blood supply. Dr. Pierre Robichaud, Acute Care Medical Director, and Dr. Nicola Matthew, Internal Medicine Medical Director, share, “we are proud to be following best practices to maximize the benefit of blood transfusions – a limited and precious healthcare resource.”   Now more than ever, the hospital staff have come to understand that appropriate use of finite resources, including the supply of blood, is an essential part of safe and high-quality care.

Reducing unnecessary transfusions minimizes the possibility of developing antibodies that would make finding compatible units of blood harder to locate which could potentially delay future emergency transfusions. Transfusion reactions, although uncommon, are also reduced when unnecessary transfusions are eliminated.

The LACGH laboratory initiated the Choosing Blood Wisely quality improvement project in April 2021. They improvement team began the process of educating care team members on transfusion best practices and began reporting statistics to Canadian Blood Services. The simple change of repeat hemoglobin testing after the first blood unit transfused to monitor how each patient responds has drastically reduced the number of patients that receive more than one unit of packed red blood cells. The education for this change was enabled by Dr. Jeannie Callum, Kingston Health Sciences Center. As LACGH’s transfusion specialist, she supported the Choosing wisely project and commonly consults with LACGH for complex transfusion cases.

“The path to achieving our choosing blood wisely designation was truly a collaborative one. It required sustained efforts from multiple groups including Laboratory, Nursing, Management, I.T., and Physicians” comments Dr. Robichaud.

Pam Hodgen, Laboratory Charge Technologist adds that “by reducing the number of units we transfuse we not only make transfusion safer for patients, we also reduce healthcare costs and unnecessary laboratory testing. Working together with the various departments has helped achieve this prestigious goal.”

error: Content is protected !!