Blood transfusion practice in a rural hospital in Northern Ghana, Damongo, West Gonja District
- 21 May 2012
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in Transfusion
- Vol. 52 (10), 2161-2166
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1537-2995.2012.03709.x
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Blood transfusion in rural sub-Saharan Africa presents special challenges. Transfusions are primarily given for emergencies—life-threatening blood loss or anemia; blood is usually collected from family or replacement donors; and facilities to store an adequate reserve in a hospital bank are constrained. We report the everyday and organizational practices in a medium-sized district hospital in Northern Ghana. STUDY DESIGN AND METHODS: Information and data on blood transfusion practices at West Gonja Hospital, Damongo, were available from the laboratory reports, from day books and workbooks, and from direct observation in the following four areas: blood collection and blood donors; blood donation testing; blood storage and logistics; and clinical transfusion practice, adverse events, and follow-up. RESULTS: The hospital serves a rural community of 86,000. In 2009, a total of 719 units of whole blood were collected, a rate of 8.36 units per 1000 population. All donors were family or replacement donors. Positivity rates for infectious disease markers were 7.5% (64/853) for hepatitis B surface antigen, 6.1% (50/819) for hepatitis C virus, 3.9% (33/846) for human immunodeficiency virus, and 4.7% (22/468) for syphilis. Supply of laboratory materials was sometimes problematic, especially for temperature-critical materials. Difficulties in sample labeling, storage of blood and laboratory supplies, and disposal of waste were also incurred by operational, material, and financial constraints. Follow-up for outcomes of transfusion is not currently feasible. CONCLUSIONS: The operational, demographic, and financial environment pertaining in a rural hospital in Northern Ghana differs substantially from that in which much of current blood transfusion practice and technology evolved. Considerable effort and innovation will be needed to address successfully the challenges posed.Keywords
This publication has 9 references indexed in Scilit:
- Relative safety of first‐time volunteer and replacement donors in West AfricaTransfusion, 2010
- Fostering repeat donations in GhanaBiologicals, 2010
- Should we neglect or nurture replacement blood donors in sub-Saharan Africa?Biologicals, 2010
- Deferred donor care in a regional hospital blood center in GhanaTransfusion, 2009
- A pool of repeat blood donors can be generated with little expense to the blood center in sub‐Saharan AfricaTransfusion, 2008
- Transfusion in sub-Saharan Africa: does a Western model fit?Journal of Clinical Pathology, 2007
- Laboratory costs of a hospital-based blood transfusion service in MalawiJournal of Clinical Pathology, 2007
- Predonation screening of blood donors with rapid tests: implementation and efficacy of a novel approach to blood safety in resource‐poor settingsTransfusion, 2005
- Anaemia, blood transfusion practices, HIV and mortality among women of reproductive age in western KenyaTransactions of the Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene, 1994