Using Blood Wisely: lessons learnt in establishing a national implementation programme to reduce inappropriate red blood cell transfusion

Author:

Lin YuliaORCID,Levinson Wendy,Day Doreen,Lett Ryan,Petraszko Tanya,Huynh Tai,Patey Andrea MORCID

Abstract

BackgroundUp to 50% of blood is transfused inappropriately despite best evidence. In 2020, Choosing Wisely Canada launched a major national programme, ‘Using Blood Wisely’, the aim was to engage hospitals to audit their red blood cell transfusion use against national benchmarks and participate in a programme to decrease inappropriate use.Study designUsing Blood Wisely is a quality improvement programme including national benchmarks, an audit tool, recommended evidence-based effective interventions and a designation to reward success. Hospital engagement was measured using the number of hospitals signing up, performing a baseline audit, submitting the planning survey, entering two or more audits and achieving hospital designation. Barriers to implementation were collected.ResultsFrom 1 September 2020 to 31 December 2022, 229 individual hospitals signed up over time to participate. Their results are reported as 159 hospitals and hospital groups. Collectively, this accounts for 72% of the blood used in Canada. Overall, 147 (92%) performed a baseline audit, 10 (6%) submitted a planning survey and 130 (82%) entered two or more audits. At baseline (time of enrolment), 75 (51%) met both benchmarks. The designation was awarded to 62 (39%) hospital groups (a total of 105 individual hospitals) that met and sustained benchmarks. Barriers to implementation included human resource shortages, lack of local expertise to advise the team, need for more education of transfusion prescribers and competing priorities.ConclusionIn its initial phase, Using Blood Wisely engaged a substantial number of hospitals in transfusion quality improvement work and maintained that engagement. This large-scale engagement across a big country was more successful than anticipated. Additional efforts are needed to rigorously evaluate the programme’s impact on utilisation.

Publisher

BMJ

Reference18 articles.

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3. Changing red blood cell transfusion practice in obstetrics and gynaecology: a before and after study of hospital-wide education;Thiel;Transfus Med,2022

4. Reduction in red blood cell transfusion associated with engagement of the ordering physician;Tavares;Transfusion,2014

5. Restrictive blood transfusion practices are associated with improved patient outcomes;Goodnough;Transfusion,2014

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