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Before Prescribing Blood in Surgery - Questions for the Anesthesiologist
Before you prescribe blood in the Operating Room - ask yourself:
- What improvement am I aiming to achieve in this patient’s clinical condition? Can I reduce blood loss to minimise this patient’s need for transfusion?
- Have I given other treatment (e.g. intravenous replacement fluids, oxygen) before making the decision to transfuse blood?
- What are the specific clinical or laboratory indications for transfusion?
- What are the risks of transmitting HIV, hepatitis, syphilis or other infectious agents through the blood products that are available for this patient?
- Do the benefits of transfusion outweigh the risks of blood transfusion for this particular patient? What other options are there as alternatives to blood? Have I done everything I can to avoid using blood?
- In the postoperative period will a trained person monitor and respond immediately if any adverse transfusion reactions occur?
- Finally, the most important question you should ask before making a decision - would I accept this transfusion in this clinical condition, if this blood was for myself or my child?
Source material - Update in Anaesthesia - CLINICAL USE OF BLOOD ;Issue 14 (2002) Article 6: Page 1 of 1
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Mr. Jan B. Wade
Blood Management Consultant
Enhance Outcomes - Control Cost
For Information Call - 360 296-1807
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