Correlation between Phlebotomy Blood Loss and Hospital- Acquired Anemia among Acute Coronary Syndrome Patients | ||
| Mansoura Nursing Journal | ||
| Article 5, Volume 8, Issue 2, July 2021, Pages 59-75 PDF (433.9 K) | ||
| Document Type: Original Article | ||
| DOI: 10.21608/mnj.2021.213075 | ||
| Authors | ||
| Mahmoud Elmetwalli1; Nahla Khalil2; Fadia Reshia3 | ||
| 1Senior Specialist Cardiac Perfusion, King Abdul-Aziz University Hospital, Jeddah, KSA | ||
| 2Professor of Critical Care and Emergency Nursing, Faculty of Nursing, Cairo University, Egypt | ||
| 3Lecturer of Critical Care and Emergency Nursing, Faculty of Nursing, Mansoura University, Egypt Department of Nursing, College of Applied Medical Sciences, Jouf University, Sakãkã, KSA | ||
| Abstract | ||
| Background:hospital-acquired anemia (HAA) is common, with an incidence that ranges from nearly25% to 74%for the period ofhospitalization. Phlebotomy blood loss is one ofthe etiologies and predictors of HAA in acute coronary syndrome patients. Aim of this Study: identify the correlation between Phlebotomy blood loss and HAA among acute coronary syndrome patients. Material and Method: Descriptive exploratory research design was used to performthe research on one hundred and eighty patients in Cardiac Care Units at Mahallah Cardiac Center. Patients' demographic, health-relevant laboratory investigations data, drug-related data, and estimation of blood loss volume toolswere utilized in the data collection process. Results: Around two-fifth (37.8%) of the studied patients have HAA.There was a statistically significant correlation between HAA and gender & length of hospital stay(X2: 5.229, P: 0.029&X2: 21.832, P:˂0.001 respectively). On the otherhand, there was no significant correlation between HAA and phlebotomy blood loss& patient’s age (X2: 1.307, P: 0.520& X2: 1.7763, P: 0.620114 respectively). Conclusion: Around two fifths (37.8%) of acute coronary syndrome patients had HAA compared to 62.2% who were non-anemic. There was a statistically significant correlation between HAA and gender & length of hospital stay. In contrast, there was no significant correlation between HAA and phlebotomy blood loss and patient’s age among acute coronary syndrome patients atMahallah Cardiac Center.Recommendations: Future HAA prevention efforts are recommended to be effective if they include multimodal interventions that both decrease unnecessary phlebotomy blood loss through puncturing and bleeding. | ||
| Keywords | ||
| predictors; phlebotomy; hospital-acquired anemia; acute coronary syndrome | ||
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