Publications by authors named "Sophie Staples"

Background: Blood components are costly and scarce. The Blood Stocks Management Scheme (BSMS) was established in the United Kingdom (UK) to support hospital transfusion services and national blood services through collection, analysis, and monthly feedback of data on blood component inventory and wastage management. There is a growing evidence base on how best to deliver feedback for quality improvement.

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Background: Comparisons of transfusion practice between organisations are time-consuming using manual methods for data collection. We performed a feasibility study to determine whether large-scale transfusion data from three English hospitals could be combined to allow comparisons of transfusion practice.

Methods: Clinical, laboratory and transfusion data from patients discharged between 1 April 2016 and 31 March 2017 were extracted from Patient Administration Systems (PAS), Laboratory Information Management Systems (LIMS), and electronic transfusion systems at three NHS hospitals, which are academic medical centres based in large cities outside London.

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Transfusion of an incorrect blood component is an important avoidable serious hazard of transfusion resulting from process errors. Our group and others have taken advantage of new technology and developed electronic transfusion systems for safe transfusion practice in a previous studies. They allow the clinical staff to correctly identify the patient and the blood product at the bedside, ensuring the right blood product is given to the right patient.

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This report describes the evolution of the electronic clinical decision support system (CDSS) and feedback methods at our center and the challenges and lessons learned. The electronic blood product order with integrated CDSS ensures collection of data regarding the patient's clinical condition and the justification for the blood product order. An alert is generated in real time if the order is placed outside agreed guidelines.

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Background: This multicenter international study evaluated electronic remote blood issue (ERBI) for blood unit collection in hospitals.

Study Design And Methods: Retrospective data were collected from the ERBI software databases and blood bank information systems. Prospective "time-and-motion" data collection methods simulated the delivery of red blood cell units to determine the staff time for each step.

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