Managing Blood Product Administration | Skills Pool
技能檔案
Managing Blood Product Administration
Guides blood product administration with verification, monitoring, and transfusion reaction management. Use when administering blood products, monitoring transfusions, or managing transfusion reactions.
Transfusion of blood products is a high-risk nursing intervention. Mistransfusion (administration of an incompatible blood product to the wrong patient) is a sentinel event with an estimated fatality rate of 1 in 76,000 units transfused. Joint Commission NPSG.01.01.01 (patient identification) applies with heightened rigor to blood product administration. NPSG.01.03.01 specifically addresses eliminating transfusion errors through proper patient and product verification. AABB Standards for Blood Banks and Transfusion Services and the Circular of Information for the Use of Human Blood and Blood Components define requirements for safe transfusion. CMS Conditions of Participation (§482.23) require that transfusion services follow accepted standards. State health codes often impose additional requirements for blood bank and transfusion protocols. This skill ensures compliance with verification, administration, monitoring, and reaction management requirements for every blood product transfusion.
Checkpoint A — Intake Verification
Required Pre-Transfusion Information
相關技能
Provider order for blood product with: product type, number of units, rate of infusion, special processing (irradiated, leukoreduced, CMV-negative, washed)
Blood type and crossmatch results (Type and Screen or Type and Crossmatch)
Informed consent for transfusion signed per institutional and state requirements
Baseline vital signs within 30 minutes of transfusion initiation
Two patient identifiers verified (name + DOB or name + MRN)
Allergy history including any prior transfusion reactions (type, severity, premedication effective)
IV access: minimum 20G for RBCs (18G preferred for rapid transfusion); 22G acceptable for platelets/plasma
Pre-Transfusion Safety Requirements
Blood product obtained from blood bank with proper chain of custody documentation
Blood product inspected for: correct labeling, expiration date/time, integrity of bag (no leaks, discoloration, clots), appropriate appearance for product type
Blood product administration set prepared: standard blood filter (170–260 micron); no medications or solutions added to blood products (exception: 0.9% sodium chloride)
Premedication administered if ordered (acetaminophen, diphenhydramine) with sufficient lead time
This is the most critical safety step. Two qualified staff members independently verify at the bedside:
Patient identity: Ask the patient to state their full name and date of birth; compare against the wristband
Blood product label matches the patient's:
Patient name
Medical record number
ABO/Rh type
Unit number (blood bank tag matches the compatibility label on the blood bag)
Expiration date and time
Crossmatch compatibility: Compatibility label confirms the product has been tested and is compatible for this specific patient
Product type: Matches the physician order (PRBCs, platelets, FFP, cryoprecipitate, etc.)
Special processing: Matches the order (irradiated, leukoreduced, CMV-negative, etc.)
Both verifiers sign the blood bank tag and transfusion record. Any discrepancy = DO NOT TRANSFUSE. Return the product to the blood bank and investigate.
Step 2 — Initiate the Transfusion
Flush the IV line with 0.9% sodium chloride (the only compatible solution with blood products)
Begin transfusion slowly: first 15 minutes at a rate not exceeding 2 mL/min (approximately 50 mL for RBCs)
Remain at the bedside for the first 15 minutes — most severe transfusion reactions (acute hemolytic, anaphylactic) occur within the first 15 minutes
Obtain vital signs at:
Baseline (within 30 minutes pre-transfusion)
15 minutes after start
Every 30–60 minutes during transfusion (per institutional policy)
Upon completion
1 hour post-completion (per institutional policy)
Increase the rate after 15 minutes if tolerated, per physician order and product type:
PRBCs: typically over 2–4 hours per unit (max 4 hours from issue)
Platelets: typically over 30–60 minutes
FFP: typically over 30–60 minutes
Cryoprecipitate: typically over 15–30 minutes
Step 3 — Monitor for Transfusion Reactions
Assess the patient continuously during transfusion for signs of reaction:
Signs: high fever (≥ 2°C rise), rigors, hypotension, tachycardia
Onset: rapid, during transfusion
Most common with platelets (stored at room temperature)
Step 4 — Manage a Transfusion Reaction
If a transfusion reaction is suspected:
STOP the transfusion immediately
Disconnect the blood product tubing from the IV catheter (do not flush the blood tubing into the patient)
Maintain IV access with new tubing and 0.9% sodium chloride
Assess ABCs and vital signs
Notify the provider immediately
Notify the blood bank
Send required specimens to the blood bank per institutional protocol:
Post-transfusion blood sample (EDTA tube) from a fresh venipuncture (not from the IV line used for transfusion)
Remaining blood product bag with attached tubing
First post-reaction urine specimen
Complete a transfusion reaction investigation form
Document in the medical record: time of onset, signs/symptoms, time transfusion stopped, interventions, patient response, specimens sent, provider notification
Administer treatments per physician order:
Mild allergic: diphenhydramine; may resume transfusion after symptoms resolve if approved by blood bank/provider
Severe allergic/anaphylactic: epinephrine, corticosteroids, airway management
Febrile: acetaminophen; rule out hemolytic and septic causes before resuming any blood product
Hemolytic: aggressive IV fluids to maintain renal perfusion, vasopressors if needed, monitor for DIC
TRALI: supportive respiratory care (oxygen, possible mechanical ventilation)
TACO: diuretics, oxygen, slow or stop infusion rate for future transfusions
Verification: both verifiers' names, confirmation of all checkpoints (patient ID, product label, crossmatch, expiration)
Administration: start time, initial rate, rate changes with times, end time
Monitoring: vital signs at all required intervals (baseline, 15 min, per policy during infusion, at completion, post-completion)
Patient response: tolerance of transfusion, any adverse signs/symptoms
Reaction management: if applicable, complete reaction documentation per Step 4
Volume: total volume infused
Post-transfusion: follow-up labs per order (repeat H&H typically 1–2 hours post-transfusion; platelet count 1 hour post-platelet transfusion)
Checkpoint B — Transfusion Completion Review
Per-Unit Verification
Bedside two-person verification completed and documented for this unit
Vital signs obtained at all required intervals
Transfusion completed within 4 hours of issue from blood bank
No signs of transfusion reaction (or reaction managed per protocol if one occurred)
Post-transfusion labs ordered and pending/resulted
Blood bank tag and forms completed and returned to blood bank
Multi-Unit Verification
Each unit verified independently (never batch-verify multiple units)
No more than one unit transfusing at a time (unless massive transfusion protocol)
Cumulative volume tracked for TACO risk assessment
Ongoing tolerance documented between units
Quality Audit
Two-person bedside verification completed and documented for every unit (zero tolerance for deviation)
Vital signs documented at all required intervals per institutional policy
Transfusion completed within 4 hours of blood bank issue (CMS/AABB requirement)
Informed consent present in medical record per state and institutional requirements
All transfusion reactions reported to blood bank within required timeframe
Transfusion reaction investigation completed per AABB requirements
Blood product wastage documented and tracked per institutional policy
Transfusion appropriateness reviewed per blood utilization committee guidelines
Compliant with Joint Commission NPSG.01.01.01 (patient identification) and NPSG.01.03.01 (eliminate transfusion errors)
Compliant with AABB Standards for Blood Banks and Transfusion Services
Guidelines
Joint Commission NPSG.01.01.01: Use at least two patient identifiers; NPSG.01.03.01: eliminate transfusion errors through proper patient and blood product identification
AABB Standards: Blood Banks and Transfusion Services standards define requirements for collection, processing, storage, distribution, and transfusion
Circular of Information: Published by AABB/ARC/AATB — the definitive reference for indications, administration, and adverse effects of blood components
CMS CoP §482.23: Transfusion services must follow accepted standards of practice
FDA: Blood products are regulated as biologics; serious transfusion reactions must be reported to FDA via MedWatch for fatalities
Massive Transfusion Protocol (MTP): Activation criteria and product ratios (typically 1:1:1 RBC:FFP:Platelets) defined by institutional trauma/critical care guidelines
Jehovah's Witness patients: Respect patient's right to refuse blood products per advance directive and informed consent law; document the refusal and alternative treatments discussed
Scope of practice: RN performs bedside verification, initiates and monitors transfusion, recognizes and responds to transfusion reactions, and documents the episode; blood bank technologist performs crossmatch and issues product; physician orders the transfusion and manages reaction treatment
Temperature rule: Blood products must be initiated within 30 minutes of removal from controlled storage; completed within 4 hours of issue; never re-refrigerate blood that has been at room temperature > 30 minutes