Background: Red blood cell (RBC) product wastage in hospitals is reported to range from 0.1% to 6.7%. Wastage at our institution averaged 4.4% of 63,000 issued RBC products. Data indicated that approximately 87% of wasted RBC units were either individual units that were out of blood bank for more than 30 minutes (dispensed but not administered) or units packed in transport containers that had temperature indicators affixed to each unit. We hypothesized that Lean Sigma methodology could be used to reduce RBC wastage by 50%.
Study Design And Methods: An interdisciplinary hospital team (transfusion medicine, nursing, and anesthesiology) used Lean Sigma methodology as a tool to reduce RBC product wastage, with a focus on container wastage, which was determined to yield the largest impact. Using the five-part Lean Sigma process-define, measure, analyze, improve, and control-the team collected baseline wastage data, identified major factors affecting RBC product wastage, and implemented interventions to reduce amount of wastage.
Results: Factors identified as contributors to RBC wastage most amenable to improvement were lack of awareness and training of staff ordering and handling RBC products, management of temperature-validated containers, inconsistent interpretation of RBC temperature indicators, and need for accountability when ordering blood products. Overall RBC product wastage decreased from 4.4% to a sustained rate of less than 2%. This reduction decreased the number of RBC units wasted by approximately 4300 per year, savings approximately $800,000 over the 4-year period of the study.
Conclusions: Lean Sigma methodology was an effective tool for reducing RBC wastage in a large academic hospital.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1537-2995.2010.02679.x | DOI Listing |
Int J Qual Health Care
January 2025
Independent Lean Six Sigma Scholar, Dublin, Ireland.
Cureus
November 2024
Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism, University of Minnesota School of Medicine, Minneapolis, USA.
Background: Depression screening is an important first step to identifying patients who might benefit from depression treatment. Merit-based incentive payment system (MIPS) quality measures can yield financial benefits or losses for healthcare systems, including depression screening.
Objectives: This study aims to (1) develop a team-based care workflow to improve MIPS depression screening in a specialty clinic and (2) modify the workflow to include a virtual nursing and behavioral health resource after the COVID-19 pandemic hit.
Scand J Clin Lab Invest
December 2024
INOVIE BIOFUTUR laboratory (Inovie member), Paris, France.
Introduction: Verification and validation of analytical methods are crucial aspects of quality assurance in a laboratory. This study aimed to develop a risk analysis and assessment tool to streamline the process of identifying so-called 'sentinel' tests.
Materials And Methods: The Roche Cobas 8000 systems were evaluated to analyze 83 serum analytes, including routine chemistry, immunoassays, and therapeutic drugs.
Background: Many hospitals and surgery centers have focused improvement efforts on operating room inefficiencies. A common inefficiency is missing and unusable surgical instrumentation, which can result in case delays and decreased effectiveness. Lean Six Sigma methodology, a set of process improvement tools focused on the reduction of waste and variation, has been used to identify and correct root causes of missing and unusable instrumentation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJt Comm J Qual Patient Saf
January 2025
Background: Increased care demands at a health care institution led to strained resources, emergency department (ED) congestion, safety events, and patient and employee dissatisfaction. Moreover, high volumes of afternoon discharges contributed to limited early morning bed availability and admission bottlenecks.
Methods: A 29-month pre-post design quality improvement project on 19 acute care, adult medicine units across two campuses at a large academic medical center was implemented to improve discharge timeliness, length of stay (LOS), and ED throughput by increasing pre-11:00 a.
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