Civilian walking blood bank emergency preparedness plan

Transfusion. 2021 Jul:61 Suppl 1:S313-S325. doi: 10.1111/trf.16458.

Abstract

Background: The current global pandemic has created unprecedented challenges in the blood supply network. Given the recent shortages, there must be a civilian plan for massively bleeding patients when there are no blood products on the shelf. Recognizing that the time to death in bleeding patients is less than 2 h, timely resupply from unaffected locations is not possible. One solution is to transfuse emergency untested whole blood (EUWB), similar to the extensive military experience fine-tuned over the last 19 years. While this concept is anathema in current civilian transfusion practice, it seems prudent to have a vetted plan in place.

Methods and materials: During the early stages of the 2020 global pandemic, a multidisciplinary and international group of clinicians with broad experience in transfusion medicine communicated routinely. The result is a planning document that provides both background information and a high-level guide on how to emergently deliver EUWB for patients who would otherwise die of hemorrhage.

Results and conclusions: Similar plans have been utilized in remote locations, both on the battlefield and in civilian practice. The proposed recommendations are designed to provide high-level guidance for experienced blood bankers, transfusion experts, clinicians, and health authorities. Like with all emergency preparedness, it is always better to have a well-thought-out and trained plan in place, rather than trying to develop a hasty plan in the midst of a disaster. We need to prevent the potential for empty shelves and bleeding patients dying for lack of blood.

Keywords: emergency; transfusion; walking blood bank; whole blood.

MeSH terms

  • Blood Banking* / methods
  • Blood Preservation / methods
  • Blood Transfusion / methods
  • COVID-19 / epidemiology
  • Civil Defense
  • Emergency Service, Hospital
  • Humans
  • Pandemics