Transfusion
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North American transfusion guidelines do not stipulate a time limit between drawing the specimen for pretransfusion testing and giving the transfusion to patients who have not received a transfusion or been pregnant in the preceding 3 months. British guidelines suggest that separated plasma and serum can be stored at -30 degrees C for up to 6 months, but they draw attention to the paucity of evidence concerning the use of stored samples. In Australia, transfusion guidelines recommend a maximum of 10 days' validity for pretransfusion specimens, which requires the patient to present for pretransfusion testing within 10 days of admission or to undergo retesting after admission, which in turn necessitates additional time in the hospital before operation. The study was performed to document the safety of using for pretransfusion testing a blood sample collected more than 10 days before surgery. ⋯ For patients who have not been transfused or pregnant in the previous 3 months, it is safe to crossmatch blood for transfusion by using a sample collected well in advance of elective surgery and stored at -30 degrees C.
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The Hunter Area Pathology Service provides transfusion services to 4 metropolitan and 11 rural hospitals in Australia. To improve blood availability, conserve blood stocks, and reduce crossmatch-to-transfusion ratios, a networked electronic blood release system (EBRS) has been developed for computer cross-matching within the laboratory and at sites remote from the transfusion laboratory. It is innovative, in that non-laboratory staffs have been trained to release computer-matched blood at remote hospitals without transfusion laboratories. ⋯ The EBRS is a safe and efficient means of providing red cells within the laboratory and at remote hospitals without laboratory services.