Background and Objectives
This report describes the implementation of the first pre‐hospital transfusion service in Latin America, with red blood cell concentrates available for immediate use in mobile land units.
Materials and Methods
A partnership was established between the Regional Mobile Emergency Service and the Regional Blood Bank, with further development of protocols for the storage, transportation and transfusion of red blood cell concentrates in an ambulance, with the acquisition of special thermal boxes, a heater for blood components and digital thermometers.
Results
The Service was developed from May 2019 and implemented in September 2020, in a mobile intensive care unit serving 11 cities, reaching a population of approximately 480 000 inhabitants. Two red blood cell concentrates, type ‘O’ RhD negative, are available, stored in a special sealed thermal box and with continuous temperature monitoring. A specific transfusion protocol was developed, in accordance with the institutional protocols of the Hospital and its Blood Bank.
Conclusion
This is the first description of a pre‐hospital transfusion service implemented in Latin America, with the potential to reduce the number of deaths from civil trauma and which can be extrapolated to other institutions or countries in similar conditions.
The necessity of improving nursing care to children with burns, admitted to a Pediatric Unit of a General Hospital, led the authors to adapt the ward so as to have one room prepared for such children. Results were good. They can be proved by the quicker evolution of the patients' condition, the increased interest of nursing personnel in caring for such patients and in the decreasing time splent by them in the accomflish ment of their tashs.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.