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Hospitals and laboratories across the United States are grappling with a shortage of Becton Dickinson BACTEC blood culture bottles that threatens to extend at least until September.
In a health advisory, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) warned that the critical shortage could lead to “delays in diagnosis, misdiagnosis, or other challenges” in the management of patients with infectious diseases.
Healthcare providers, laboratories, healthcare facility administrators, and state, tribal, local, and territorial health departments affected by the shortage “should immediately begin to assess their situations and develop plans and options to mitigate the potential impact,” according to the health advisory.
What to Do
To reduce the impact of the shortage, facilities are urged to:
- Determine the type of blood culture bottles they have
- Optimize the use of blood cultures at their facility
- Take steps to prevent blood culture contamination
- Ensure that the appropriate volume of blood is collected for culture
- Assess alternate options for blood cultures
- Work with a nearby facility or send samples to another laboratory
Health departments are advised to contact hospitals and laboratories in their jurisdictions to determine whether the shortage will affect them. Health departments are also encouraged to educate others on the supply shortage, optimal use of blood cultures, and mechanisms for reporting supply chain shortages or interruptions to the Food and Drug Administration (FDA), as well as to help with communication between laboratories and facilities willing to assist others in need.
To further assist affected providers, the CDC, in collaboration with the Infectious Diseases Society of America, hosted a webinar with speakers from Johns Hopkins University, Massachusetts General Hospital, and Vanderbilt University, who shared what their institutions are doing to cope with the shortage and protect patients.
Why It Happened
In June, Becton Dickinson warned its customers that they may experience “intermittent delays” in the supply of some BACTEC blood culture media over the coming months because of reduced availability of plastic bottles from its supplier.
In a July 22 update, the company said the supplier issues were “more complex” than originally communicated and it is taking steps to “resolve this challenge as quickly as possible.”
In July, the FDA published a letter to healthcare providers acknowledging the supply disruptions and recommended strategies to preserve the supply for patients at highest risk.
Becton Dickinson has promised an update by September to this “dynamic and evolving situation.”
A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.
Hospitals and laboratories across the United States are grappling with a shortage of Becton Dickinson BACTEC blood culture bottles that threatens to extend at least until September.
In a health advisory, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) warned that the critical shortage could lead to “delays in diagnosis, misdiagnosis, or other challenges” in the management of patients with infectious diseases.
Healthcare providers, laboratories, healthcare facility administrators, and state, tribal, local, and territorial health departments affected by the shortage “should immediately begin to assess their situations and develop plans and options to mitigate the potential impact,” according to the health advisory.
What to Do
To reduce the impact of the shortage, facilities are urged to:
- Determine the type of blood culture bottles they have
- Optimize the use of blood cultures at their facility
- Take steps to prevent blood culture contamination
- Ensure that the appropriate volume of blood is collected for culture
- Assess alternate options for blood cultures
- Work with a nearby facility or send samples to another laboratory
Health departments are advised to contact hospitals and laboratories in their jurisdictions to determine whether the shortage will affect them. Health departments are also encouraged to educate others on the supply shortage, optimal use of blood cultures, and mechanisms for reporting supply chain shortages or interruptions to the Food and Drug Administration (FDA), as well as to help with communication between laboratories and facilities willing to assist others in need.
To further assist affected providers, the CDC, in collaboration with the Infectious Diseases Society of America, hosted a webinar with speakers from Johns Hopkins University, Massachusetts General Hospital, and Vanderbilt University, who shared what their institutions are doing to cope with the shortage and protect patients.
Why It Happened
In June, Becton Dickinson warned its customers that they may experience “intermittent delays” in the supply of some BACTEC blood culture media over the coming months because of reduced availability of plastic bottles from its supplier.
In a July 22 update, the company said the supplier issues were “more complex” than originally communicated and it is taking steps to “resolve this challenge as quickly as possible.”
In July, the FDA published a letter to healthcare providers acknowledging the supply disruptions and recommended strategies to preserve the supply for patients at highest risk.
Becton Dickinson has promised an update by September to this “dynamic and evolving situation.”
A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.
Hospitals and laboratories across the United States are grappling with a shortage of Becton Dickinson BACTEC blood culture bottles that threatens to extend at least until September.
In a health advisory, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) warned that the critical shortage could lead to “delays in diagnosis, misdiagnosis, or other challenges” in the management of patients with infectious diseases.
Healthcare providers, laboratories, healthcare facility administrators, and state, tribal, local, and territorial health departments affected by the shortage “should immediately begin to assess their situations and develop plans and options to mitigate the potential impact,” according to the health advisory.
What to Do
To reduce the impact of the shortage, facilities are urged to:
- Determine the type of blood culture bottles they have
- Optimize the use of blood cultures at their facility
- Take steps to prevent blood culture contamination
- Ensure that the appropriate volume of blood is collected for culture
- Assess alternate options for blood cultures
- Work with a nearby facility or send samples to another laboratory
Health departments are advised to contact hospitals and laboratories in their jurisdictions to determine whether the shortage will affect them. Health departments are also encouraged to educate others on the supply shortage, optimal use of blood cultures, and mechanisms for reporting supply chain shortages or interruptions to the Food and Drug Administration (FDA), as well as to help with communication between laboratories and facilities willing to assist others in need.
To further assist affected providers, the CDC, in collaboration with the Infectious Diseases Society of America, hosted a webinar with speakers from Johns Hopkins University, Massachusetts General Hospital, and Vanderbilt University, who shared what their institutions are doing to cope with the shortage and protect patients.
Why It Happened
In June, Becton Dickinson warned its customers that they may experience “intermittent delays” in the supply of some BACTEC blood culture media over the coming months because of reduced availability of plastic bottles from its supplier.
In a July 22 update, the company said the supplier issues were “more complex” than originally communicated and it is taking steps to “resolve this challenge as quickly as possible.”
In July, the FDA published a letter to healthcare providers acknowledging the supply disruptions and recommended strategies to preserve the supply for patients at highest risk.
Becton Dickinson has promised an update by September to this “dynamic and evolving situation.”
A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.