A prospective assessment of the time required to obtain one unit of fresh whole blood by civilian phlebotomists and Army laboratory technicians (68 K)

Author:

Mancha Fabiola12,Mendez Jessica12,April Michael D.34,Fisher Andrew D.56,Hill Ronnie1ORCID,Bynum James1,Cap Andrew P.137,Corley Jason B.8,Schauer Steven G.137ORCID

Affiliation:

1. U.S. Army Institute of Surgical Research JBSA Fort Sam Houston Texas USA

2. Metis Foundation San Antonio Texas USA

3. Military and Emergency Medicine Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences Bethesda Maryland USA

4. 40th Resuscitative Surgical Detachment Fort Carson Colorado USA

5. School of Medicine University of New Mexico Albuquerque New Mexico USA

6. Texas Army National Guard Austin Texas USA

7. Brooke Army Medical Center JBSA Fort Sam Houston Texas USA

8. Medical Capability Development and Integration Directorate JBSA Fort Sam Houston Texas USA

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundResuscitation with blood products improves survival after major hemorrhage. Blood product administration at or near the point‐of‐injury (POI) amplifies this benefit. Size, weight, and cold‐chain management challenges all limit the amount of blood medics can carry. Warm fresh whole blood (WFWB) transfusions from a pre‐screened donor within the unit represent an alternative source of blood at the POI. We measured the time required for civilian and Army technicians performing phlebotomy frequently to obtain one unit of blood to serve as a goal metric for combat medics being trained in this skill.MethodsWe gathered demographic and experience data along with proportion of first intravenous cannulation attempt success, time to blood flow initiated, and time to unit draw complete.ResultsWe prospectively enrolled 12 civilian phlebotomy technicians and 10 Army laboratory technicians performing whole blood collections on 50 and 68 donors respectively. The mean time from setup to needle insertion was 3.7 min for civilians versus 4.2 min for Army technicians. The mean time from blood flowing to the bag being full was 10.7 min versus 8.4 min for civilians versus Army technicians respectively. The mean bag weights were 514 g versus 522 g. First‐pass intravenous cannulation success was 96% versus 98% respectively.ConclusionsWe found a high first intravenous cannulation attempt success among both the civilian and Army technicians. Medians times were <5 min to obtain venipuncture and <11 min to obtain one unit. These findings provide time‐based benchmarks for potential use during transfusion training among military medics.

Funder

U.S. Department of Defense

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Hematology,Immunology,Immunology and Allergy

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