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Blood inventory management in the type and screen era
Author(s) -
Pereira A.
Publication year - 2005
Publication title -
vox sanguinis
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.68
H-Index - 83
eISSN - 1423-0410
pISSN - 0042-9007
DOI - 10.1111/j.1423-0410.2005.00700.x
Subject(s) - cvar , economic shortage , blood bank , blood management , inventory management , blood units , blood transfusion , medicine , blood supply , operations management , emergency medicine , business , risk management , expected shortfall , economics , surgery , finance , linguistics , philosophy , government (linguistics)
Background and Objective Previous models on the management of hospital blood inventories have mostly dealt with the optimization of variables related to the assigned, cross‐matched inventory. Because the type and screen (T&S) procedure allows blood banks to manage surgical reserves with only unassigned inventories, it becomes necessary to gain insight into the factors that determine the efficiency of this kind of blood inventory. Study Design Stochastic model that simulates the routine operation of a hospital blood bank inventory over a finite number of days was used. Factors that were analysed for their influence on outdate and shortage rates included the mean (MEAN) and variation (CVAR) in daily transfusion, the remaining shelf life of blood units shipped from the blood supplier (RSL) and the number of days between consecutive shipments (INT). Results Outdate and shortage rates grew exponentially with CVAR, an effect that could be partially counterbalanced by increasing RSL. The variables, MEAN and INT, had little influence on the inventory, provided that blood stocks shipped from the supplier are targeted at the expected average demand for transfusion and RSL is greater than INT. Conclusions In hospitals that do not hold cross‐matched inventories, CVAR is the major parameter in determining the blood inventory performance. Hospitals with large CVAR must be supplied with young red blood cell (RBC) units, whereas hospitals with smaller CVAR perform well with older stocks. These results advocate for using each hospital's CVAR as the leader parameter in regional optimization policies based on recycling blood units among participating hospitals.