An investigation of rejection rates, sources thereof and methods to reduce specimen rejection
Date
2024
Authors
Ballim, Afsana
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Abstract
Background
Specimen rejection occurs when specimens are sent to a medical diagnostic
laboratory and are deemed unsuitable for analysis based on specimen acceptability
criteria. Patient care may be hindered due to rejections. Specimen rejections impact
negatively on patients, healthcare workers and the diagnostic laboratory. The aim of
this study was to investigate specimen rejection rates, the contributing factors, and
methods to reduce the number of rejected specimens, thereby improving healthcare
for the patient as well as improving the financial and quality standing of the laboratory.
Materials and methods
Rejection statistics were obtained for King Dinuzulu Hospital Complex (KDL) and RK
Khan Hospital (RKK) for a period of six months. An investigation of the rejection rates
and common causes for rejection was conducted. The information gathered from the
rejection statistics was used to create training material for training workshops. Pre
training and post-training questionnaires were completed to determine the
effectiveness of the training. Rejection statistics were re-collected for two months post
the training workshop sessions to evaluate the rejection rates for improvement.
Results
The initial rejection rates indicated that KDL and RKK exceeded the allowable limit of
rejections (National Health Laboratory Service allowable limit < 3%). The primary
reason for specimen rejections was identified as errors that occur in the pre-analytical
phase, with haemolysis emerging as the predominant contributing factor. Training
workshops were conducted, although the improvement in assessment score for the
workshop was 49.6% (p < 0.001), the rejection statistics collected post-training
workshop showed an insignificant change in overall rejection rates at KDL and RKK
(p-value = 0.139 and 0.242 respectively). Conclusion
Specimen rejection is a growing problem that requires mitigation. Structured training
has shown to improve pre-analytical knowledge, however, it was noted that the
interventions taken by offering training workshops did not reduce the rate of specimen
rejections.
Description
Dissertation submitted in partial fulfillment for the Master of Health Sciences in Medical Laboratory Science, Durban University of Technology, Durban, South Africa, 2024.
Keywords
Specimen rejection, Haemolysis, Training, Criteria
Citation
DOI
https://doi.org/10.51415/10321/5590