Study finds withdrawing less blood for ICU lab tests reduces patient strain, waste

Ashley Ruelland, shown in a handout photo, had countless blood tests and more than 100 blood transfusions after a head-on crash that left her with multiple injuries, but she says it's encouraging to know that drawing less blood is best for patients, based on a large ºÃÉ«tv study. THE CANADIAN PRESS/HO-The Ottawa Hospital **MANDATORY CREDIT**

Intensive care units can collect less blood for lab tests and thereby reduce transfusions for critically ill patients who may have blood drawn multiple times a day, suggests a large study that says switching to lower-volume tubes can preserve the blood supply and reduce strain on already fragile patients.

Researchers note that 90 per cent of blood collected by a standard test tube — which can draw up to six millilitres — is wasted because only 0.5 ml of blood is needed for a typical lab test.

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