rfid in blood transfusion project briefing

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1 Radio Frequency Identification in blood transfusion management Alexander Beisser, MSc Health Informatics City University London, Centre for Health Informatics 25 th October 2007 Project Briefing © Alexander Beisser 2007

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Briefing document on my Thesis for my MSc Health Informatics degree at City University

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Page 1: RFID in Blood Transfusion Project Briefing

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Radio Frequency Identificationin blood transfusion management

Alexander Beisser, MSc Health InformaticsCity University London,

Centre for Health Informatics

25th October 2007

Project Briefing

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Page 2: RFID in Blood Transfusion Project Briefing

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The project briefing

About this study

About Barcodes

About RFID

Page 3: RFID in Blood Transfusion Project Briefing

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About this study

Alexander Beisser Works for ICT Shared Services at Newham University

Hospital Trust Dissertation for Master of Science in Health

Informatics City University London Course accredited by NHS Connecting for Health

Page 4: RFID in Blood Transfusion Project Briefing

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About this study The main question

Can the emerging Radio Frequency Identification

technology help to make blood transfusion safer,

more reliable and allow better tracking of (used)

blood products within a secondary care setting like

Newham University Hospital Trust in accordance

with the requirements of the National Patient Safety

Agency and SHOT1 initiatives?

1Serious Hazards of Transfusion, Manchester, UK

Page 5: RFID in Blood Transfusion Project Briefing

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About this study The aim of project

Audit and analysis of technology available to enhance safety in the transfusion process in a secondary care setting.

Barcode versus Radio Frequency technology

Investigation into the possibility to use RFID technology to improve safety in transfusion medicine in accordance to NPSA Right patient – right blood initiative.

Page 6: RFID in Blood Transfusion Project Briefing

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About this studyMotivation for study

Safety of blood transfusions : 609 cases reported to SHOT1 in 2005 (out of more than

3.6 million transfusions) 37% of transfusion related errors occur in hospital

transfusion laboratory environment Most common error is IBCT (485 cases = 79%) 1358 near miss incidences SHOT recommendations

Right patient – right blood initiative of NPSA And others

1Serious Hazards of Transfusion, Manchester, UK

Page 7: RFID in Blood Transfusion Project Briefing

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About this study

Audit to be performed to see if: Can RFID technology be added to barcode system? Can semi-active / active be used to automatically

interrogate and audits blood products for blood products condition

Has RFID technology the potential to reduce IBCT error rate?

How can RFID improve safety by automatic authentication of Patient Clinician / nurse Blood product

Page 8: RFID in Blood Transfusion Project Briefing

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About this study The focus points in project

In blood banks Monitoring of blood products condition

At patient bedside Correct blood for correct patient Patient identification Patient condition monitoring

(temperature, etc.) Audit of blood products used in

transfusion

Page 9: RFID in Blood Transfusion Project Briefing

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About Barcode Technology

Machine readable representation of information Use of dark ink on light background to create high / low reflectance to

represent converted 1s and 0s Information is read by optical barcode readers (barcode scanner) using

a laser beam Developed in 1948, first commercial use in 1966, success in 1980’s Barcodes are nowadays commonly used to capture ID Data to identify

products, goods or other items Examples: Supermarket checkouts, sample identification in pathology (or

other healthcare) environment

Typical Linear Barcodeas it can be found

on everyday products

2 dimensional barcodeas it can be found

i.e. in a pathology setting

Barcode reader(cordless version)

Page 10: RFID in Blood Transfusion Project Briefing

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About Barcode TechnologyAdvantages of Barcodes

Virtually free (≈ £0.003 per code for linear barcodes)

Widely used within retail and supply chain industry Used within healthcare settings Easy implementation Well-formed and established international and

European standards Users are well aware of technology Easy to use and therefore lower training costs Can be used across industry and country borders

Page 11: RFID in Blood Transfusion Project Briefing

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About Barcode TechnologyDisadvantages of Barcodes (I)

Line of sight required to read barcode Only one barcode can be read at a time Reading speed lower than RFID Reading of label can be difficult when label is

curved or crumbling Dust and dirt influence readability of code

Page 12: RFID in Blood Transfusion Project Briefing

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About Barcode TechnologyDisadvantages of Barcodes (II)

Label can crumble when exposed to water (i.e. when patient is taking a shower)

Limited amount of data can be stored on label No additional data can be written or stored on

label except a unique number New label is required when data format / structure

changes or multiple barcodes are needed A connection to a database is required

Page 13: RFID in Blood Transfusion Project Briefing

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About RFID Technology

Automatic identification method First used in 1939 by Royal Air Force to distinguish between

enemy and allied aircrafts Storage of information on electronic tags Data is retrieved by RFID readers (interrogators) from a distance

that can be greater then with barcodes Widely used in retail and supply chain sectors Healthcare industry shows more interest in emerging RFID

solutions for healthcare settings Technology consist of

Antenna incorporatedinto RFID tag

Electronic RFID tag RFID reader(here attached to a PDA)

Page 14: RFID in Blood Transfusion Project Briefing

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About RFID TechnologyDifferent types of tags

3 different types of RFID tags availablePassiveSemi-activeActive

Page 15: RFID in Blood Transfusion Project Briefing

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About RFID Technology The advantages of RFID

Contact-free authentication Out of sight authentication Read and write to tags Store data on tags Immunity to dust and dirt on patient

wristband Data processing done by reader Tag can monitor conditions and Alert when use by date or other conditions are reached No permanent database connection required (dependent

on the data stored on wristband) Integration into other business processes

Page 16: RFID in Blood Transfusion Project Briefing

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About RFID Technology The challenges for using RFID

Costs of tags Cost of infrastructure Interference with other medical equipment Standardisation still in progress Data privacy Acceptability by patients and staff Not yet widely used within the NHS Process re-engineering could be required No out-of-box solution available

Page 17: RFID in Blood Transfusion Project Briefing

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About RFID Technology RFID technology in healthcare (I)

RFID projects and systems within healthcare environments: America:

Massachusetts General Hospital: Blood product tagging Jacoby Medical Center NY: Blood product tagging Shelby County Regional MC: Patient tracking in surgery

European Union: Saarbruecken Clinic: Patient identification and blood product

tagging United Kingdom:

Portsmouth NHS Trust: Blood sample & testing monitoring Birmingham Heartlands Hospital: Patient and equipment

tracking in surgery Wirral Hospital NHS Trust: Patient tracking

Page 18: RFID in Blood Transfusion Project Briefing

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About RFID Technology RFID technology in healthcare (II)

Birmingham Heartlands Hospital: Patient & equipment tracking in surgery

South Tyneside NHS Trusts: Mother baby matching / monitor

Mayday Hospital Croydon NHS Trust: Blood tracking

Mersey General Hospital: Staff location tracking for panic alert system

Portsmouth NHS Trust: Tracking of blood tests

Wirral Hospital NHS Trust: Patient tracking in A&E Department

Dudley Hospital: Baby tracking in delivery suite

Brighton & Hove University Hospital: Equipment library

Mid Yorkshire Hospitals NHS Trust: Patient notes tracking

Human Fertilisation & Embryology Authority: IVF egg tracking

Page 19: RFID in Blood Transfusion Project Briefing

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The questionnaire

A short note about the questionnaire: Anonymous questionnaire Contains open answer and rating questions To answer rating questions

circle the scale at the appropriate point.

Page 20: RFID in Blood Transfusion Project Briefing

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Thank you

Thank you very much for your attention. Please feel free to contact me if you have

any further questions.

Alex Beisser MSc, BSc, CISA, ITIL

[email protected]/alex428uk

uk.linkedin.com/in/beissera/