The impact of a patient education program on directed donations |
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Authors: | H Silver, M Lachman, S Badon |
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Affiliation: | Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine, Hartford Hospital, Connecticut. |
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Abstract: | The effect of an informational program in which the benefits and disadvantages of directed donations are discussed directly with the prospective recipient of the blood and/or that patient's family was examined during a 20-month period. Data collected for 27 regional Connecticut hospitals that accept directed donations were compared with similar data for Hartford Hospital, an 885-bed tertiary-care facility. The number of directed-donor units (68) collected by the American Red Cross Blood Services for Hartford Hospital during the study period was comparable to the number (average, 62.3) provided for smaller (301-450 beds) institutions in the state. The percentage that directed-donor units drawn for Hartford Hospital represented of the total number of homologous units provided (0.23%) was less than that for any of the categories of hospitals, by size, in the state. Supplying the patient and/or the patient's family, in a personalized manner, with information concerning the advantages and disadvantages of directed as well as of volunteer donor blood can result in a marked overall reduction in the number of directed donations and also serves to reassure those concerned about blood transfusion. |
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