TY - JOUR
T1 - Making patient blood management the new norm(al) as experienced by implementors in diverse countries
AU - PBM Implementation Group
AU - Hofmann, Axel
AU - Spahn, Donat R.
AU - Holtorf, Anke Peggy
AU - Isbister, James
AU - Hamdorf, Jeff
AU - Campbell, Linda
AU - Benites, Bruno
AU - Duarte, Gustavo
AU - Rabello, Guillermo
AU - Ji, Hongwen
AU - Wei, Lihui
AU - Ivancan, Visnja
AU - Kovac, Natasa
AU - Tomic Mahecic, Tina
AU - Matsouka, Chara
AU - Aggeliki, Bairaktari
AU - Anthi, Gafou
AU - Charalabopoulos, Alexandros
AU - Attalah, David
AU - Jebara, Samia
AU - Chahine, Rabih
AU - Pérez Calatayud, Ángel Augusto
AU - Galvan Garcia, Ángel Fernando
AU - Ayala, Miguel
AU - Torres Pérez, Bettina
AU - Park, Jong Hoon
AU - Kim, Young Woo
AU - Lee, Jeong Jae
AU - Um, Tae Hyun
AU - A.Al-Humaidan, Hind
AU - Al Sughayir, Ammar
AU - Batarfi, Khalid
AU - Hindawi, Salwa
AU - Louw, Vernon
AU - Thompson, Jackie
AU - Alkis, Neslihan
AU - Gunaydin, Serdar
AU - Gunaydin, Berrin
PY - 2021/12
Y1 - 2021/12
N2 - Background: Patient blood management (PBM) describes a set of evidence-based practices to optimize medical and surgical patient outcomes by clinically managing and preserving a patient’s own blood. This concepts aims to detect and treat anemia, minimize the risk for blood loss and the need for blood replacement for each patient through a coordinated multidisciplinary care process. In combination with blood loss, anemia is the main driver for transfusion and all three are independent risk factors for adverse outcomes including morbidity and mortality. Evidence demonstrates that PBM significantly improves outcomes and safety while reducing cost by macroeconomic magnitudes. Despite its huge potential to improve healthcare systems, PBM is not yet adopted broadly. The aim of this study is to analyze the collective experiences of a diverse group of PBM implementors across countries reflecting different healthcare contexts and to use these experiences to develop a guidance for initiating and orchestrating PBM implementation for stakeholders from diverse professional backgrounds. Methods: Semi-structured interviews were conducted with 1–4 PBM implementors from 12 countries in Asia, Latin America, Australia, Central and Eastern Europe, the Middle East, and Africa. Responses reflecting the drivers, barriers, measures, and stakeholders regarding the implementation of PBM were summarized per country and underwent qualitative content analysis. Clustering the resulting implementation measures by levels of intervention for PBM implementation informed a PBM implementation framework. Results: A set of PBM implementation measures were extracted from the interviews with the implementors. Most of these measures relate to one of six levels of implementation including government, healthcare providers, funding, research, training/education, and patients/public. Essential cross-level measures are multi-stakeholder communication and collaboration. Conclusion: The implementation matrix resulting from this research helps to decompose the complexity of PBM implementation into concrete measures on each implementation level. It provides guidance for diverse stakeholders to design, initiate and develop strategies and plans to make PBM a national standard of care, thus closing current practice gaps and matching this unmet public health need.
AB - Background: Patient blood management (PBM) describes a set of evidence-based practices to optimize medical and surgical patient outcomes by clinically managing and preserving a patient’s own blood. This concepts aims to detect and treat anemia, minimize the risk for blood loss and the need for blood replacement for each patient through a coordinated multidisciplinary care process. In combination with blood loss, anemia is the main driver for transfusion and all three are independent risk factors for adverse outcomes including morbidity and mortality. Evidence demonstrates that PBM significantly improves outcomes and safety while reducing cost by macroeconomic magnitudes. Despite its huge potential to improve healthcare systems, PBM is not yet adopted broadly. The aim of this study is to analyze the collective experiences of a diverse group of PBM implementors across countries reflecting different healthcare contexts and to use these experiences to develop a guidance for initiating and orchestrating PBM implementation for stakeholders from diverse professional backgrounds. Methods: Semi-structured interviews were conducted with 1–4 PBM implementors from 12 countries in Asia, Latin America, Australia, Central and Eastern Europe, the Middle East, and Africa. Responses reflecting the drivers, barriers, measures, and stakeholders regarding the implementation of PBM were summarized per country and underwent qualitative content analysis. Clustering the resulting implementation measures by levels of intervention for PBM implementation informed a PBM implementation framework. Results: A set of PBM implementation measures were extracted from the interviews with the implementors. Most of these measures relate to one of six levels of implementation including government, healthcare providers, funding, research, training/education, and patients/public. Essential cross-level measures are multi-stakeholder communication and collaboration. Conclusion: The implementation matrix resulting from this research helps to decompose the complexity of PBM implementation into concrete measures on each implementation level. It provides guidance for diverse stakeholders to design, initiate and develop strategies and plans to make PBM a national standard of care, thus closing current practice gaps and matching this unmet public health need.
KW - Culture change
KW - Implementation
KW - Patient blood management
KW - Patient outcomes
KW - Practice change
KW - Transfusion
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85109158048&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1186/s12913-021-06484-3
DO - 10.1186/s12913-021-06484-3
M3 - Article
C2 - 34215251
AN - SCOPUS:85109158048
SN - 1472-6963
VL - 21
JO - BMC Health Services Research
JF - BMC Health Services Research
IS - 1
M1 - 634
ER -