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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This 7 page paper considers the importance of inventory control of blood bank products. This paper relates some of the history of recent concern and the implications. Bibliography lists 4 sources.
Page Count:
7 pages (~225 words per page)
File: MH11_MHBloodB.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
blood supply, including continued confusion sparked in the 1980s about blood transfusions and giving blood; the short shelf-life of some blood products; and the increasing need for blood products.
In response, inventory control measures have been put into place for organizations like the American Red Cross in an effort to manage their blood bank inventories and put into place
strategies for improving supply responses to blood demand (Jarvis, 1998). As a result of the shortage and potential problems in the presence of shortages, especially of rare blood
types, questions have been raised about the best approach for inventory control. Some have argued that liquid red blood cell inventory could be managed better through increasing promotion of
autologous or directed donations programs, in which individuals either bank their own blood or donate blood for use by specific individuals. Others have suggested that the solution is to
change the maximum surgical blood order schedule (MSBOS), the guideline for the standard number of units of red blood cells to be typed and crossmatched for specific procedures. Each
institution determines their own MSBOS and sets guidelines for specific surgical procedures. In assessing which of these changes would be best suited for a particular hospital, it is
necessary to reflect upon the reasons why blood supplies have declined in recent years. In the 1980s, the discovery of AIDS, Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome, spread by the HIV
virus, was associated with blood transfusions. Transfusion anxiety, then, occurred as a result of major disruptions in blood bank participation, primarily due to the unsurity of individuals regarding the
safety of blood donation (Bello, 1987). Though there is no connection between the donation of blood products and the contracting of HIV infection, blood banks continue to suffer as
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