Scientific Publications Database
Article Title: Understanding Intraoperative Transfusion Decision-Making Variability: A Qualitative StudyAuthors: Lenet, Tori; Tropiano, Joseph; Skanes, Stephanie; Ivankovic, Victoria; Verret, Michael; McIsaac, Daniel I.; Tinmouth, Alan; Nicholls, Stuart G.; Patey, Andrea M.; Fergusson, Dean A.; Martel, Guillaume
Journal: TRANSFUSION MEDICINE REVIEWS Volume 37 Issue 2
Date of Publication:2023
Abstract:
There is evidence of significant intraoperative red blood cell (RBC) transfusion variability that cannot be explained by case-mix, and may reflect unwarranted transfusions. The objective was to explore the source of intraoperative RBC transfusion variability by eliciting the beliefs of anesthesiologists and sur-geons that underlie transfusion decisions. Interviews based on the Theoretical Domains Framework were conducted to identify beliefs about intraoperative transfusion. Content analysis was performed to group statements into domains. Relevant domains were selected based on frequency of beliefs, perceived influ-ence on transfusion, and the presence of conflicting beliefs within domains. Of the 28 transfusion experts recruited internationally (16 anesthesiologists, 12 surgeons), 24 (86%) were Canadian or American and 11 (39%) identified as female. Eight relevant domains were identified: (1) Knowledge (insufficient evidence to guide intraoperative transfusion), (2) Social/professional role and identity (surgeons/anesthesiologists share responsibility for transfusions), (3) Beliefs about consequences (concerns about morbidity of trans-fusion/anemia), (4) Environmental context/resources (transfusions influenced by type of surgery, local blood supply, cost of transfusion), (5) Social influences (institutional culture, judgment by peers, surgeon-anesthesiologist relationship, patient preference influencing transfusion decisions), (6) Behavioral regula-tion (need for intraoperative transfusion guidelines, usefulness of audits and educational sessions to guide transfusion), (7) Nature of the behaviors (overtransfusion remains commonplace, transfusion practice be-coming more restrictive over time), and (8) Memory, attention, and decision processes (various patient and operative characteristics are incorporated into transfusion decisions). This study identified a range of fac-tors underlying intraoperative transfusion decision-making and partly explain the variability in transfu-sion behavior. Targeted theory-informed behavior-change interventions derived from this work could help reduce intraoperative transfusion variability.& COPY; 2023 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.