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    Background Safe blood is essential for the care of patients with life-threatening anemia and hemorrhage. Low blood donation rates, inefficient testing procedures, and other supply chain disruptions in blood administration affect patients in low-resource settings across Sub-Saharan countries, including Kenya. Most efforts to improve access to transfusion have been unidimensional, usually focusing on only point along the blood system continuum, and have excluded community stakeholders from early stages of intervention development. Context-appropriate interventions to improve the availability of safe blood at the point of use in low-resource settings are of paramount importance. Thus, this protocol proposes a multifaceted approach to characterize the Kenyan blood supply chain through quantitative and qualitative analyses as well as an industrial engineering approach. Methods This study will use a mixed-methods approach in addition to engineering process mapping, modeling and simulation of

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    • .@NIH_NHLBI-funded investigators publish #protocol for #BLOODSAFE #Kenya🇰🇪 See the conceptual #model's 3x3x3 matrix components: #pathways #settings #systems. #HIV #SDOH #GlobalHealth #ImpSci @NHLBI_BLOODDir @Fogarty_NIH @PEPFAR #policy #evidence @NIH Read https://t.co/m0jqlua4Ge https://t.co/eseHXnBxip

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    This is a healthcare blog for those interested in acute care pediatrics with perspectives and information on acute illness and injury in children.

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    • New blog post...creating the best medical program or practice. Click link: https://t.co/Biu6rGhLEg or visit https://t.co/yO0wsAVtE5 for more articles. #medicine #systems #outcomes #success #blog #davidepsteinmd #EpsteinsPearls #blogging #WritingCommunity #MedTwitter #MedEd https://t.co/D2vcFYjLVT

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    Traditionally, generations of physicians have been taught that the evaluation of the febrile hospitalised patient consists of the ‘panculture;’ that is, microbiological culture of blood, urine, sputum or stool in search of an offending pathogen. Often, these laboratory tests are paired with complementary imaging such as chest or abdominal X-rays in order to elucidate sources of infection. Indeed,…

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    • RT @vineet_chopra: Thinking about this work (now 5 yrs old) in relation to setting up #systems to reduce #CLABSI. https://t.co/fRx86Gpwmm…

  • Mashup Score: 3

    Traditionally, generations of physicians have been taught that the evaluation of the febrile hospitalised patient consists of the ‘panculture;’ that is, microbiological culture of blood, urine, sputum or stool in search of an offending pathogen. Often, these laboratory tests are paired with complementary imaging such as chest or abdominal X-rays in order to elucidate sources of infection. Indeed,…

    Tweet Tweets with this article
    • RT @vineet_chopra: Thinking about this work (now 5 yrs old) in relation to setting up #systems to reduce #CLABSI. https://t.co/fRx86Gpwmm…