Doctors’ practice and attitudes towards red blood cell transfusion at Mthatha Regional Hospital, Eastern Cape, South Africa: A mixed methods study

Background: Unnecessary blood transfusion exposes recipients to potential harms. Aim: The aim of this study was to describe blood transfusion practice and explore doctors’ attitudes towards transfusion. Setting: A hospital providing level 1 and 2 services. Methods: A mixed-methods study design wa...

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Main Authors: Temitope Adedayo, Don O'Mahony, Oluakyode Adeleke, Sikhumbuzo Mabunda
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: AOSIS 2021-06-01
Series:African Journal of Primary Health Care & Family Medicine
Subjects:
Online Access:https://phcfm.org/index.php/phcfm/article/view/2889
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spelling doaj-a6544a18ff56491e90dc984dcd344f832021-07-02T08:44:41ZengAOSISAfrican Journal of Primary Health Care & Family Medicine2071-29282071-29362021-06-01131e1e810.4102/phcfm.v13i1.2889837Doctors’ practice and attitudes towards red blood cell transfusion at Mthatha Regional Hospital, Eastern Cape, South Africa: A mixed methods studyTemitope Adedayo0Don O'Mahony1Oluakyode Adeleke2Sikhumbuzo Mabunda3Department of Family Medicine and Rural Health, Faculty of Health Sciences, Walter Sisulu University, MthathaDepartment of Family Medicine and Rural Health, Faculty of Health Sciences, Walter Sisulu University, MthathaDepartment of Family Medicine and Rural Health, Faculty of Health Sciences, Walter Sisulu University, MthathaThe George Institute for Global Health, Faculty of Medicine and Health, University of New South Wales, SydneyBackground: Unnecessary blood transfusion exposes recipients to potential harms. Aim: The aim of this study was to describe blood transfusion practice and explore doctors’ attitudes towards transfusion. Setting: A hospital providing level 1 and 2 services. Methods: A mixed-methods study design was used. In the cross-sectional descriptive component, a sample was taken from patients transfused over a 2-month period. Blood use was categorised as for medical anaemia or haemorrhage, and appropriate or not. The qualitative component comprised a purposeful sample for focus group and individual semi-structured interviews. Results: Of 239 patients sampled, 62% were transfused for medical anaemia and 38% for haemorrhage. In the medical anaemia group, compliance with age-appropriate transfusion thresholds was 69%. In medical anaemia and haemorrhage, 114 (77%) and 85 (93.4%) of recipients had orders for ≥ 2 red blood cell (RBC) units, respectively. In adults ≥ 18 years old with medical anaemia, 47.1% of orders would have resulted in a haemoglobin (Hb) 8 g/dL. Six doctors participated in focus group and eleven in individual interviews. There was a lack of awareness of institutional transfusion guidelines, disagreement on appropriate RBC transfusion thresholds and comments that more than one RBC unit should always be transfused. Factors informing decisions to transfuse included advice from senior colleagues, relieving symptoms of anaemia and high product costs. Conclusion: Most orders were for two or more units. In medical anaemia, doctors’ compliance with RBC transfusion thresholds was reasonable; however, almost half of the orders would have resulted in overtransfusion. The attitudes of doctors sampled suggest that their transfusion practice is influenced more by institutional values than formal guidelines.https://phcfm.org/index.php/phcfm/article/view/2889red blood cell transfusiondoctors’ attitudesdoctors’ practicetransfusion thresholdsovertransfusiondescriptive studyqualitative study
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Temitope Adedayo
Don O'Mahony
Oluakyode Adeleke
Sikhumbuzo Mabunda
spellingShingle Temitope Adedayo
Don O'Mahony
Oluakyode Adeleke
Sikhumbuzo Mabunda
Doctors’ practice and attitudes towards red blood cell transfusion at Mthatha Regional Hospital, Eastern Cape, South Africa: A mixed methods study
African Journal of Primary Health Care & Family Medicine
red blood cell transfusion
doctors’ attitudes
doctors’ practice
transfusion thresholds
overtransfusion
descriptive study
qualitative study
author_facet Temitope Adedayo
Don O'Mahony
Oluakyode Adeleke
Sikhumbuzo Mabunda
author_sort Temitope Adedayo
title Doctors’ practice and attitudes towards red blood cell transfusion at Mthatha Regional Hospital, Eastern Cape, South Africa: A mixed methods study
title_short Doctors’ practice and attitudes towards red blood cell transfusion at Mthatha Regional Hospital, Eastern Cape, South Africa: A mixed methods study
title_full Doctors’ practice and attitudes towards red blood cell transfusion at Mthatha Regional Hospital, Eastern Cape, South Africa: A mixed methods study
title_fullStr Doctors’ practice and attitudes towards red blood cell transfusion at Mthatha Regional Hospital, Eastern Cape, South Africa: A mixed methods study
title_full_unstemmed Doctors’ practice and attitudes towards red blood cell transfusion at Mthatha Regional Hospital, Eastern Cape, South Africa: A mixed methods study
title_sort doctors’ practice and attitudes towards red blood cell transfusion at mthatha regional hospital, eastern cape, south africa: a mixed methods study
publisher AOSIS
series African Journal of Primary Health Care & Family Medicine
issn 2071-2928
2071-2936
publishDate 2021-06-01
description Background: Unnecessary blood transfusion exposes recipients to potential harms. Aim: The aim of this study was to describe blood transfusion practice and explore doctors’ attitudes towards transfusion. Setting: A hospital providing level 1 and 2 services. Methods: A mixed-methods study design was used. In the cross-sectional descriptive component, a sample was taken from patients transfused over a 2-month period. Blood use was categorised as for medical anaemia or haemorrhage, and appropriate or not. The qualitative component comprised a purposeful sample for focus group and individual semi-structured interviews. Results: Of 239 patients sampled, 62% were transfused for medical anaemia and 38% for haemorrhage. In the medical anaemia group, compliance with age-appropriate transfusion thresholds was 69%. In medical anaemia and haemorrhage, 114 (77%) and 85 (93.4%) of recipients had orders for ≥ 2 red blood cell (RBC) units, respectively. In adults ≥ 18 years old with medical anaemia, 47.1% of orders would have resulted in a haemoglobin (Hb) 8 g/dL. Six doctors participated in focus group and eleven in individual interviews. There was a lack of awareness of institutional transfusion guidelines, disagreement on appropriate RBC transfusion thresholds and comments that more than one RBC unit should always be transfused. Factors informing decisions to transfuse included advice from senior colleagues, relieving symptoms of anaemia and high product costs. Conclusion: Most orders were for two or more units. In medical anaemia, doctors’ compliance with RBC transfusion thresholds was reasonable; however, almost half of the orders would have resulted in overtransfusion. The attitudes of doctors sampled suggest that their transfusion practice is influenced more by institutional values than formal guidelines.
topic red blood cell transfusion
doctors’ attitudes
doctors’ practice
transfusion thresholds
overtransfusion
descriptive study
qualitative study
url https://phcfm.org/index.php/phcfm/article/view/2889
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