Should adding pain, oxygen saturation and physical assessment to vital signs become the new standard of care for detecting blood transfusion reactions?
Jamie Kay RoneyBarbara Erin WhitleyLauren JohnstonMichella DeleonJudith Christine RobnettPublished in: Vox sanguinis (2022)
Vital sign components varied across reviewed studies. Respiratory rate and pain were not always included in 'vital signs' to identify transfusion reactions. Only low-level data and no clinical trials loosely informing frequency of vital sign monitoring to transfusion reaction detection were found. Respiratory (to include oxygen saturation, lung sounds and respiratory rate) and pain assessment emerged as crucial to acute and delayed transfusion reaction recognition. The disconnect between 'vital signs' and the varied vital sign components reported to detect transfusion reactions in scientific literature requires further exploration.
Keyphrases
- chronic pain
- cardiac surgery
- pain management
- clinical trial
- neuropathic pain
- sickle cell disease
- healthcare
- systematic review
- acute kidney injury
- physical activity
- palliative care
- respiratory tract
- spinal cord injury
- quality improvement
- intensive care unit
- label free
- respiratory failure
- extracorporeal membrane oxygenation
- study protocol
- quantum dots