Background: The donor history interview is an important aspect of blood safety, in part designed to identify unsuitable donors who may present a risk to blood recipients. There is evidence from behavioral science literature that use of computer-assisted interviewing may be superior to face-to-face (FTF) and paper techniques in eliciting sensitive behavioral information of interest to blood collection facilities.

Study Design And Methods: Audiovisual touch-screen computer-assisted donor self-interviewing with the AABB Uniform Donor History Questionnaire was deployed for routine use in a regional blood center replacing FTF interviews. Donor and staff perception and satisfaction surveys were performed to assess acceptance of the system. Time studies of automated and manual methods were conducted. Rates of deferral of first-time donors for high-risk behaviors and rates of errors and omissions on donor interviewing for the two systems were tabulated and compared.

Results: Donors and staff strongly preferred the automated system in all dimensions assessed. Donor time increased by 4 minutes but staff time declined by 5 minutes per interview. Identification of high-risk behaviors among first-time donors significantly increased. Rates of errors and omissions on donor history forms identified at audit were reduced.

Conclusions: Both blood donors and collections staff enthusiastically accepted the automated donor interviewing system. A well-designed audiovisual touch-screen donor self-interviewing system is superior to face-to-face interviewing and most likely more effective than paper interviewing.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1537-2995.2004.04020.xDOI Listing

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