Surgery, Emergency Care Most Affected According to ASHP Survey
2/11/2014
Critical shortages of i.v. saline solutions are affecting nearly 75 percent
of U.S. hospitals and other health care settings, according to a survey of
pharmacy directors conducted by the American Society of Health-System
Pharmacists (ASHP). Sodium chloride solution 0.9 percent, also called normal
saline solution, is widely used in medical care, including treating dehydration,
for patients receiving dialysis, and emergency care.
The online survey was sent to directors of pharmacy who are members of ASHP
in early February. Preliminary results reveal:
- 76 percent of respondents are experiencing a shortage of sodium chloride intravenous products.
- While conservation strategies are working for 53 percent of respondents experiencing this shortage, 29 percent of respondents reporting a shortage have a supply inadequate to meet all patient needs.
- Many respondents are also experiencing shortages of products that can be used as alternatives to normal saline solution, such as Lactated Ringers solution and dextrose/sodium chloride combination solutions.
- The areas of care most frequently cited as heavily affected by the shortage
include:
- Surgery and perioperative care (64 percent)
- Emergency care (56 percent)
- Hematology/oncology (21 percent)
- Dialysis (20 percent)
- Blood and blood component administration (14 percent)
- Pediatric care (10 percent)
- Respondents’ organizations are using a variety of strategies to obtain sodium chloride intravenous products. Examples include using tighter inventory control, such as reducing inventory on patient care units to better manage the supply (73 percent); obtaining supply from a secondary distributor (42 percent); compounding product in house, such as pooling or splitting different size containers or adjusting sodium chloride content of alternatives (20 percent); and using a compounding outsourcer to obtain product they cannot get from manufacturers (4 percent).
"While the survey does not point to patients being harmed as a result of
the shortage, such a severe shortage of this widely used intravenous solution is
extremely concerning,” said ASHP CEO Paul W. Abramowitz, Pharm.D., Sc.D. (Hon.),
FASHP. “Hospital and health-system pharmacists are working very hard to provide
the most effective care to patients during this shortage and it is important
that all stakeholders work together to solve this
crisis.”
About ASHP
ASHP is the national professional organization whose 40,000 members
include pharmacists, pharmacy technicians, and student pharmacists who provide
patient care services in hospitals, health systems, and ambulatory clinics. For
70 years, the Society has been on the forefront of efforts to improve medication
use and enhance patient safety. For more information about the wide array of
ASHP activities and the many ways in which pharmacists help people make the best
use of medicines, visit ASHP's website, www.ashp.org, or its consumer website, www.safemedication.com.
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