
Special Report
Blood Transfusions In The Home Sweet Home:
How To Avoid A Sour Outcome
Kaaron Benson, MD, Pathology Service,
H. Lee Moffitt Cancer Center & Research Institute
Introduction
The health care policies of this decade have been dominated by concerns by both
patients and providers regarding the quality and access to treatment and its associated
cost. The patient's quality of life has become a strong consideration when designing
individual patterns of care. When specific criteria are met, home health care can be a
convenient, beneficial, and cost-effective alternative to hospitalization for many
patients.
Home health care has several advantages (Table 1), and these same
benefits can be applied to support the practice of administering blood transfusions in the
home. Inpatient hospitalization is expensive, and the demand for out-of-hospital services
is partially fueled by efforts to contain costs. Patients who are frail, chronically ill,
or terminally ill may be considerably more comfortable, both physically and
psychologically, when receiving home care. In an age of consumer awareness, growing
numbers of patients are demanding these new services. A rapidly expanding population of
home-bound patients, elderly individuals, patients infected with the human
immunodeficiency virus, and others may benefit from home health care. With current
sophisticated venous access devices, routine hospital services can be more easily provided
in the home.1 A precedent for sophisticated home health care services already
exists -- ventilatory support, parenteral nutrition, intravenous antibiotics,
chemotherapy, and pain medication are now routinely provided in the home.
Implementing a Home Care Program
In recognition of the increasing demand for home health care, the number of home health
care agencies in the United States increased by 70% from 1989 through 1995.2
Out-of-hospital health care can be provided in a number of settings, including an
outpatient hospital clinic or surgical center, physician's office, ambulatory care center,
dialysis center, or the patient's home.
The home setting causes the most concern, particularly in reference to blood transfusions,
because of the limited complex care that could be provided if a severe, adverse reaction
occurred. A home transfusion program should have adequate safeguards to ensure that
patient safety is not jeopardized.
Approval for establishing a home transfusion program should be obtained from the
hospital's medical staff, transfusion committee, transfusion service, administration, and
legal counsel. Most programs rely on the hospital or blood center to provide the necessary
blood bank testing (eg, ABO and
Rh typing, red blood cell antibody screening, and crossmatching). The blood is then
transported and transfused by qualified personnel from either the hospital or the home
health care agency. The physician's order should stipulate not only the component type and
number of units, but also the flow rate, concurrent fluids to be administered, any
necessary premedications, and laboratory tests to be obtained before and after
transfusion.
Eligibility Requirements
Most home transfusion programs agree on a number of criteria that must be met prior to
initiating transfusions in a patient's home.3-5 Patients who are eligible for
home transfusions are often debilitated, chronically ill individuals who may require more
frequent transfusions over longer periods of time than many hospitalized patients who
require transfusions. An appropriate candidate should meet home-bound constraints that
make transportation to the hospital difficult. The patient should be cooperative, have a
stable cardiopulmonary status, and have acceptable venous access. The patient should have
been recently evaluated by his or her physician. The first blood transfusion should not be
in the home due to the risk, though rare, of an anaphylactic reaction in a patient with
IgA deficiency. A history of moderate to severe transfusion reactions should disqualify a
patient. The transfusion risk:benefit ratio itself, as well as the added stress placed on
these patients and their families for in-hospital transfusions, should be considered when
deciding if a patient should receive a transfusion in the home setting.
Home transfusion recipients are generally anemic and/or thrombocytopenic patients with
diagnoses such as end-stage malignancies, acquired immunodeficiency syndrome, chronic
gastrointestinal bleeding, or anemia of chronic disease. The most common components
transfused in the home are red blood cells and platelets.3,6 Plasma components
-- fresh frozen plasma and cryoprecipitate -- are rarely transfused in the home.
Since advanced emergency medical care should be available within a reasonable time
period, patients living in rural areas are generally not appropriate candidates. A second
responsible adult should be present to assist the transfusionist. If a telephone is not
available in the home, the transfusionist should have access to a cellular phone. In order
to maximize patient safety, the service should be offered during the daytime only;
evenings, weekends, and rush-hour periods should be avoided.
Guidelines of a Home Care Program
Policies and procedures detailing all aspects of the program need to be
developed. Several sources provide detailed steps to follow and sample forms.4-8
The American Association of Blood Banks' Standards for Blood Banks and Transfusion
Services9 provides guidelines for safe transfusion practice. Topics that
should be addressed in the policies and procedures of a home transfusion program are
listed in Table 2. Patients should be approved for home transfusions by both the attending
physician and the blood bank director. Proper patient identification and linkage of the
blood bank samples to the units of blood are critical. The application of a patient
identification band at the time of sample collection is recommended. Appropriate blood
bank tests include patient ABO/Rh typing for red cell and platelet transfusion, as well as
an additional red cell antibody screen and crossmatch for red cell transfusion. Details
regarding blood administration should indicate acceptable flow rates (typical rates for
red cell units are 1.5 to 2.0 hours per unit; platelets are administered as quickly as the
patient can tolerate), concurrent intravenous fluid administration, and required
monitoring of the patient during and after the transfusion.
The components considered appropriate for home transfusion should be determined in
advance. There should be no need for whole blood or granulocytes, and plasma components
(fresh frozen plasma and cryoprecipitate) should be only rarely indicated for home
transfusion. Stipulating the maximum number of units that may be routinely administered in
the home may be effective in avoiding volume overload. Some programs recommend the use of
diuretics during or after transfusion for patients at risk for volume overload, and some
routinely use filtered cellular components to minimize the risk of febrile nonhemolytic
reactions. Premedication for transfusion should be reserved only for patients with prior
reactions, but the transfusionist should be equipped with certain medications (eg,
acetaminophen, diphenhydramine, epinephrine) in the event of a reaction. Universal
precautions must be applied, and all materials with blood or body fluids must be removed
from the home and properly discarded.
Minimum qualifications of the transfusionist must be determined. Many programs require
experience with prior transfusions and/or acute care. Certification for transfusion
administration is required by some states. Methods to evaluate training and competency
must be established as part of a complete quality assurance program.
Obtaining a patient's informed consent for blood transfusion is mandatory, but many
hospitals do not use a standardized form. Hospitals may choose to obtain consent verbally
without requiring the patient to sign an informed consent form. When transfusions occur
outside the hospital, a standardized consent form is recommended that describes the
procedure, anticipated benefits and, most importantly, the additional risks incurred by
being at a distance from acute medical care.10,11
Benefits, Risks, and Disadvantages
While home transfusion provides several benefits, a significant risk is the decrease in
patient safety when access to advanced medical care is compromised due to location. This
risk may be lessened by the enhanced supervision of the patient by the transfusionist who
is responsible for only one patient. Still, if acute hemolysis, endotoxic shock, or
anaphylaxis occurs, the patient must be managed by one individual with limited resources
until emergency personnel arrive. Thus, potential transfusion recipients must be carefully
selected based on eligibility criteria and not solely on convenience for the patient.
Transfusion recipients have also expressed concerns about patient safety. In one study
of 29 oncology patients who received chronic transfusions in a hospital outpatient clinic,
93% did not want home transfusions, and 72% believed that home transfusions posed a
greater risk than transfusions in the hospital.12
Evaluations of home transfusion safety are limited; however, these transfusions are
generally reported to be safe when appropriate procedures and precaution are used.
Thompson13 reported administering 1,096 red cell and platelet units to 321
patients over four years without adverse consequences. Pluth14 and Miller15
administered a total of more than 700 components in the home without complications. At our
center, we have provided blood transfusions in the home since 1991. While the numbers have
been relatively small (approximately 100 red cells and 150 platelets transfused annually),
no moderate or severe reactions have occurred (K.B., unpublished data, 1997).
Home health care is generally touted as less expensive than hospital-based care.
However, while administration of intravenous antibiotics16 and care of
ventilator-dependent adults17 can be provided at a lower cost in the home,
blood transfusions may not be cost effective in the home setting.18 Some
preliminary evidence indicates that home care may not always produce savings compared with
hospital or nursing home care.19 Red cell transfusions are generally
administered over one to two hours and up to four hours per unit transfused.
The typical two-unit transfusion requires that the transfusionist remain with the
recipient in the home for an average of two to four hours and up to eight hours. An
additional hour may be needed to prepare for the transfusion and to monitor the patient at
the completion of the infusion. The transfusionist also may need to pick up the units at
the transfusion service and deliver them to the patient's home, after the sample for blood
bank testing has been previously collected, delivered to the transfusion service, and
tested. In the hospital setting, the units are readily available for transfusion, and the
transfusionist can attend other patients during the infusion. In a comparison of charges
for blood transfusions in the home and hospital for the Tampa, Florida region,12
no significant differences were seen between the two settings. However, patients and their
families may realize savings by not having to transport the patient, pay for meals away
from home, and incur lost income of family members who would otherwise accompany the
patient.
Conclusions
Home transfusion therapy is a relatively new service. Many hospitals, blood centers,
and home health care agencies are carefully assessing their existing practices. The
American Association of Blood Banks has recently surveyed facilities with home transfusion
programs to determine current practice.3 Physicians and hospitals interested in
establishing a home transfusion program need to determine who will be responsible for
blood bank testing, preparing the blood component, and infusing the blood. A clear
understanding must exist among the ordering physician, hospital administration,
transfusion service, blood center, and home health care agency regarding accountability
for each aspect of the home transfusion program. Some transfusion services and blood
centers require review of a home health care agency's policies and procedures when blood
administration in the home is outsourced.3,6 While this overseeing process may
incur additional liability for the transfusion service or blood center, it should at least
improve the practices of the transfusionists.
Out-of-hospital medical services have expanded with increasingly sophisticated care
provided in the patient's home. While the benefits and risks of transfusions are well
recognized, blood transfusions in the home incur additional risk due to the distance from
emergency medical services. Careful assessment and use of appropriate policies and
procedures involving a home transfusion program can minimize the additional risks of home
transfusion. The patient's physician, the hospital's transfusion service and transfusion
committee, the local blood center, and the home health care agency may all have
responsibilities for providing a safe transfusion in the home. By establishing a quality
home transfusion program, optimal medical care can be provided to patients for whom the
burden of inpatient transfusion would present a hardship.
References
- Sheldon P, Bender M. High-technology in home care: an overview of intravenous
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- National Association for Home Care. Basic statistics about home care 1996. National
Association for Home Care. Washington, DC; October 1996.
- Benson K, Popovsky M, Hume H, et al. AABB Transfusion Practices Committee. Nationwide
survey of home transfusion practices. Transfusion. 1996;36:S115. Abstract.
- Rutman RC, Silberstein LE, eds. Out-of-Hospital Transfusions. Arlington, Va:
American Association of Blood Banks; 1989.
- McVan BW. How we give blood transfusions at home. RN. 1987;50:79-82.
- Fridey JL. Practical aspects of out-of-hospital transfusion. Am J Clin Pathol.
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- Pluth NM. A home care transfusion program for patients with cancer. Oncol Nurs Forum.
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- . Miller PC. Home blood component therapy: an alternative. Nurs Int Ther Ann.
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- New P, Swanson G, Bulich R, et al. Ambulatory antibiotic infusion devices: extending the
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- Bach JR, Intinola P, Alba AS, et al. The ventilator-assisted individual: cost analysis
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- Vengelen-Tyler V. Out-of-hospital transfusion: financial perspectives. In: Fridey JL,
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American Association of Blood Banks; 1994:59-72.
- Kemper P. The evaluation of the National Long Term Care Demonstration: overview of the
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