Abstract
Background: In premature and critically ill infants, a complete blood count (CBC) is commonly collected via the heel-stick method, which is preferred because of the ongoing requirements to preserve intravenous sites. However, because of sample clotting, these specimens are often rejected, leading to unnecessary repeat heel sticks, painful stimuli, and increased costs.
Purpose: The purpose of this quality improvement project was to decrease the rate of clotted CBC samples obtained from neonates admitted in the neonatal intensive care unit.
Methods: The RE-AIM translation model, which stands for Reach, Effectiveness, Adoption, Implementation, and Maintenance, was adopted to decrease the rate of clotted CBC samples through staff education, randomized audits of the staff's heel-stick technique, and the development and implementation of a standardized capillary blood sampling protocol. The primary outcome measure was the rate of clotted CBC samples, which was defined as the proportion of clotted CBC samples.
Results: CBC clotted sample rates decreased by 27%, resulting in a cost saving of $1136, and overall CBC rejection rates decreased by 23%.
Implications for Practice: All hospital units should provide staff with an evidence-based resource, recurrent education, and evaluation of skills to avoid unnecessary repeat heel sticks and prevent increased pain sensitivity, social hypervigilance, and avoidance behavior in early infancy.
Implications for Research: Future efforts should focus on the long-term benefits of routine education and its effects on clotted sample rates and whether samples drawn by laboratory phlebotomy staff versus registered nurses/patient care technicians result in disproportionate rejection rates.