Title
The Hidden Cost of Hemolyzed Blood Samples in the Emergency Department.
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
5-17-2021
Publication Title
J Appl Lab Med
Keywords
california; los angeles; hoag
Abstract
BACKGROUND: On average, patients with hemolyzed potassium samples spend about 1 h longer in the emergency department (ED), regardless of acuity level or disposition. We aimed to quantify the direct expenses associated with poor-quality preanalytic blood samples collected in the ED.
METHODS: We created a simple table with a range of direct expenses (i.e., costs) and rates of hemolyzed sample draws, allowing for identification of potential high-level cost-of-care impact analysis. We included a range of costs informed by review of literature on the topic. Those costs range from $600 to $3000 per bed-hour. This amount was inflation adjusted from 1996 to 2020 (1.68 × [direct cost per visit] × [100 000 visits per year/365 days/24 h]). We provided a range of hemolysis incidence based on previously reported data.
RESULTS: We showed that for an ED with 100 000 annual visits, a 40% draw rate for routine chemistries (including potassium), and a 10% hemolysis incidence, the direct cost impact of hemolysis waste is approximately $4 million/year as a result of the 1 h of added length of stay on average for a patient with a hemolyzed blood sample. This amount represents an annualized estimated cost of caring for a patient in the ED with an avoidable extended length of stay.
CONCLUSIONS: The financial burden of poor-quality blood samples can be estimated using cost per bed-hour and rate of sample failure. Similar methodology may identify additional QC issues with previously invisible financial implications.
Department
Pathology & Laboratory Medicine
Department
Emergency Medicine
Recommended Citation
Phelan, Michael P; Ramos, Christopher; Walker, Laura E; Richland, Gerald; and Reineks, Edmunds Z, "The Hidden Cost of Hemolyzed Blood Samples in the Emergency Department." (2021). Articles, Abstracts, and Reports. 4874.
https://digitalcommons.psjhealth.org/publications/4874