Abstract

IntroductionTimeliness of laboratory results is crucial to patient care and outcome. Monitoring turnaround times (TAT), especially for emergency tests, is important to measure the effectiveness and efficiency of laboratory services. Laboratory-based clinical audits reveal opportunities for improving quality. Our aim was to identify the most critical steps causing a high TAT for cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) chemistry analysis in our laboratory.Materials and methodsA 6-month retrospective audit was performed. The duration of each operational phase across the laboratory work flow was examined. A process-mapping audit trail of 60 randomly selected requests with a high TAT was conducted and reasons for high TAT were tested for significance.ResultsA total of 1505 CSF chemistry requests were analysed. Transport of samples to the laboratory was primarily responsible for the high average TAT (median TAT = 170 minutes). Labelling accounted for most delays within the laboratory (median TAT = 71 minutes) with most delays occurring after regular work hours (P < 0.05). CSF chemistry requests without the appropriate number of CSF sample tubes were significantly associated with delays in movement of samples from the labelling area to the technologist’s work station (caused by a preference for microbiological testing prior to CSF chemistry).ConclusionA laboratory-based clinical audit identified sample transportation, work shift periods and use of inappropriate CSF sample tubes as drivers of high TAT for CSF chemistry in our laboratory. The results of this audit will be used to change pre-analytical practices in our laboratory with the aim of improving TAT and customer satisfaction.

Highlights

  • Timeliness of laboratory results is crucial to patient care and outcome

  • Labelling accounted for most delays within the laboratory with most delays occurring after regular work hours (P < 0.05)

  • cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) chemistry requests without the appropriate number of CSF sample tubes were significantly associated with delays in movement of samples from the labelling area to the technologist’s work station

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Summary

Introduction

Timeliness of laboratory results is crucial to patient care and outcome. Monitoring turnaround times (TAT), especially for emergency tests, is important to measure the effectiveness and efficiency of laboratory services. Laboratory-based clinical audits reveal opportunities for improving quality. Laboratory-based clinical audit is an important process in obtaining feedback for continual improvement. It involves measuring laboratory performance using selected quality indicators and defined benchmarks [1,2]. Audits in the laboratory are used to determine the root cause of non-conformities and assess the effectiveness of changes made. Timeliness of laboratory results as a quality indicator assesses the effectiveness and efficiency of the total testing process and is expressed as turnaround time (TAT) for laboratory tests [3,4,5]. It is crucial to clinicians’ and patients’ satisfaction as highlighted in College of American Pathologists (CAP) Q-probes surveys [8,9]

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