Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
2759545 | Journal of Cardiothoracic and Vascular Anesthesia | 2013 | 5 Pages |
BackgroundAnemia is a common clinical problem in cardiac surgery patients in the postoperative period and may result in transfusion in up to 90% of this population. There is tremendous variation in transfusion rates by hospital and individual physician. It is unknown if implementation of a clinical practice guideline lowers unnecessary transfusion in hospital practices that already have a restrictive transfusion culture .ObjectiveTo evaluate transfusion practice before and after implementation of a clinical practice guideline.DesignPre/post intervention study.SettingSixteen bed surgical intensive care unit in an academic hospital.ParticipantsFour hundred ninety-five adult patients undergoing cardiac surgery.InterventionsImplementation of an anemia clinical practice guideline reinforced with education and retrospective audit/feedback.Measurements and Main ResultsA total of 252 pre-intervention and 243 postintervention cases were examined. Unnecessary transfusion occurred in 14.7% of pre-intervention patients and decreased to a rate of 8.1% after guideline implementation (p = 0.016).ConclusionsThis study suggests that clinical guideline implementation utilizing guideline development, education, and compliance audit/feedback may reduce unnecessary transfusion in cardiac surgery patients. A fully powered prospective trial would be necessary to validate these findings.