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Patient blood management in India - Review of current practices and feasibility of applying appropriate standard of care guidelines. A position paper by an interdisciplinary expert group

In a developing country like India, with limited resources and access to healthcare facilities, dealing with massive hemorrhage is a major challenge. This challenge gets compounded by pre-existing anemia, hemostatic disorders, and logistic issues of timely transfer of such patients from peripheral h...

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Autores principales: Gandhi, Ajay, Görlinger, Klaus, Nair, Sukesh C., Kapoor, Poonam M., Trikha, Anjan, Mehta, Yatin, Handoo, Anil, Karlekar, Anil, Kotwal, Jyoti, John, Joseph, Apte, Shashikant, Vohra, Vijay, Gupta, Gajendra, Tiwari, Aseem K., Rani, Anjali, Singh, Shweta A.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Wolters Kluwer - Medknow 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8174427/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34103816
http://dx.doi.org/10.4103/joacp.JOACP_410_20
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author Gandhi, Ajay
Görlinger, Klaus
Nair, Sukesh C.
Kapoor, Poonam M.
Trikha, Anjan
Mehta, Yatin
Handoo, Anil
Karlekar, Anil
Kotwal, Jyoti
John, Joseph
Apte, Shashikant
Vohra, Vijay
Gupta, Gajendra
Tiwari, Aseem K.
Rani, Anjali
Singh, Shweta A.
author_facet Gandhi, Ajay
Görlinger, Klaus
Nair, Sukesh C.
Kapoor, Poonam M.
Trikha, Anjan
Mehta, Yatin
Handoo, Anil
Karlekar, Anil
Kotwal, Jyoti
John, Joseph
Apte, Shashikant
Vohra, Vijay
Gupta, Gajendra
Tiwari, Aseem K.
Rani, Anjali
Singh, Shweta A.
author_sort Gandhi, Ajay
collection PubMed
description In a developing country like India, with limited resources and access to healthcare facilities, dealing with massive hemorrhage is a major challenge. This challenge gets compounded by pre-existing anemia, hemostatic disorders, and logistic issues of timely transfer of such patients from peripheral hospitals to centers with adequate resources and management expertise. Despite the awareness amongst healthcare providers regarding management modalities of bleeding patients, no uniform Patient Blood Management (PBM) or perioperative bleeding management protocols have been implemented in India, yet. In light of this, an interdisciplinary expert group came together, comprising of experts working in transfusion medicine, hematology, obstetrics, anesthesiology and intensive care, to review current practices in management of bleeding in Indian healthcare institutions and evaluating the feasibility of implementing uniform PBM guidelines. The specific intent was to perform a gap analysis between the ideal and the current status in terms of practices and resources. The expert group identified interdisciplinary education in PBM and bleeding management, bleeding history, viscoelastic and platelet function testing, and the implementation of validated, setting-specific bleeding management protocols (algorithms) as important tools in PBM and perioperative bleeding management. Here, trauma, major surgery, postpartum hemorrhage, cardiac and liver surgery are the most common clinical settings associated with massive blood loss. Accordingly, PBM should be implemented as a multidisciplinary and practically applicable concept in India in a timely manner in order to optimize the use the precious resource blood and to increase patients' safety.
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spelling pubmed-81744272021-06-07 Patient blood management in India - Review of current practices and feasibility of applying appropriate standard of care guidelines. A position paper by an interdisciplinary expert group Gandhi, Ajay Görlinger, Klaus Nair, Sukesh C. Kapoor, Poonam M. Trikha, Anjan Mehta, Yatin Handoo, Anil Karlekar, Anil Kotwal, Jyoti John, Joseph Apte, Shashikant Vohra, Vijay Gupta, Gajendra Tiwari, Aseem K. Rani, Anjali Singh, Shweta A. J Anaesthesiol Clin Pharmacol Review Article In a developing country like India, with limited resources and access to healthcare facilities, dealing with massive hemorrhage is a major challenge. This challenge gets compounded by pre-existing anemia, hemostatic disorders, and logistic issues of timely transfer of such patients from peripheral hospitals to centers with adequate resources and management expertise. Despite the awareness amongst healthcare providers regarding management modalities of bleeding patients, no uniform Patient Blood Management (PBM) or perioperative bleeding management protocols have been implemented in India, yet. In light of this, an interdisciplinary expert group came together, comprising of experts working in transfusion medicine, hematology, obstetrics, anesthesiology and intensive care, to review current practices in management of bleeding in Indian healthcare institutions and evaluating the feasibility of implementing uniform PBM guidelines. The specific intent was to perform a gap analysis between the ideal and the current status in terms of practices and resources. The expert group identified interdisciplinary education in PBM and bleeding management, bleeding history, viscoelastic and platelet function testing, and the implementation of validated, setting-specific bleeding management protocols (algorithms) as important tools in PBM and perioperative bleeding management. Here, trauma, major surgery, postpartum hemorrhage, cardiac and liver surgery are the most common clinical settings associated with massive blood loss. Accordingly, PBM should be implemented as a multidisciplinary and practically applicable concept in India in a timely manner in order to optimize the use the precious resource blood and to increase patients' safety. Wolters Kluwer - Medknow 2021 2021-04-10 /pmc/articles/PMC8174427/ /pubmed/34103816 http://dx.doi.org/10.4103/joacp.JOACP_410_20 Text en Copyright: © 2021 Journal of Anaesthesiology Clinical Pharmacology https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/This is an open access journal, and articles are distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 License, which allows others to remix, tweak, and build upon the work non-commercially, as long as appropriate credit is given and the new creations are licensed under the identical terms.
spellingShingle Review Article
Gandhi, Ajay
Görlinger, Klaus
Nair, Sukesh C.
Kapoor, Poonam M.
Trikha, Anjan
Mehta, Yatin
Handoo, Anil
Karlekar, Anil
Kotwal, Jyoti
John, Joseph
Apte, Shashikant
Vohra, Vijay
Gupta, Gajendra
Tiwari, Aseem K.
Rani, Anjali
Singh, Shweta A.
Patient blood management in India - Review of current practices and feasibility of applying appropriate standard of care guidelines. A position paper by an interdisciplinary expert group
title Patient blood management in India - Review of current practices and feasibility of applying appropriate standard of care guidelines. A position paper by an interdisciplinary expert group
title_full Patient blood management in India - Review of current practices and feasibility of applying appropriate standard of care guidelines. A position paper by an interdisciplinary expert group
title_fullStr Patient blood management in India - Review of current practices and feasibility of applying appropriate standard of care guidelines. A position paper by an interdisciplinary expert group
title_full_unstemmed Patient blood management in India - Review of current practices and feasibility of applying appropriate standard of care guidelines. A position paper by an interdisciplinary expert group
title_short Patient blood management in India - Review of current practices and feasibility of applying appropriate standard of care guidelines. A position paper by an interdisciplinary expert group
title_sort patient blood management in india - review of current practices and feasibility of applying appropriate standard of care guidelines. a position paper by an interdisciplinary expert group
topic Review Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8174427/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34103816
http://dx.doi.org/10.4103/joacp.JOACP_410_20
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