MSL975006A
Perform immunohaematological tests

This unit of competency covers the ability of technical personnel to perform routine tests and procedures that are part of the requirements of pre- and post-blood transfusion practice. The unit also covers tests and procedures that are indicated in laboratory investigations in obstetric and perinatal medicine, in suspected haemolysis and haemolytic episodes and in other clinical circumstances.

Application

This unit of competency is applicable to technical officers and laboratory technicians working in the biomedical industry sector. It is understood that the management of any transfusion laboratory would establish for itself, in terms of its own responsibility and purposes, the ability of any worker to work in a transfusion science laboratory, regardless of the education and training record or presumed ability of any worker.

Tests will be related to the determination of blood groups and the detection of antibodies of significance in:

transfusion (as laboratory evidence that in vivo cell destruction or immunisation may occur)

pregnancy and the peri-natal period (as evidence of sensitisation of foetal red cells by transplacental maternal antibody)

the investigation of haemolysis or haemolytic episodes.

The tests that the worker will use will be validated and authorised procedures, clearly described in the laboratory's manual of procedures. The unit of competency is based on the assumption that technical personnel would perform tests and procedures under the close supervision of scientific and/or medical staff. The parameters of interpretation will be clearly described, indicating for the worker what he or she is permitted to sign-off without reference to supervisors or managers.

Industry representatives have provided case studies to illustrate the practical application of this unit of competency and to show its relevance in a workplace setting. These can be found at the end of this unit of competency under the section 'This competency in practice'.



Elements and Performance Criteria

ELEMENT

PERFORMANCE CRITERIA

1. Process samples and associated request forms

1.1. Check and match samples and request forms before they are accepted

1.2. Return samples and request forms that do not comply with requirements to their source with reasons for non-acceptance

1.3. Log acceptable samples, applying required document tracking mechanisms

1.4. Process samples as required by requested tests

1.5. Store sample components appropriately until required for testing

2. Perform tests

2.1. Select authorised tests that are indicated for the requested investigations

2.2. Conduct individual tests according to documented methodologies, applying required quality control procedures

2.3. Record all results, noting any phenomena that may be relevant to the interpretation of results

2.4. Seek advice of section head or other responsible colleague when result interpretation is outside parameters of authorised approval

2.5. Store unused samples, for possible future reference, under conditions suitable to maintain viability

3. Maintain a safe environment

3.1. Use established work practices and personal protective equipment to ensure personal safety and that of other laboratory personnel

3.2. Clean up spills using appropriate techniques to protect personnel, work area and environment from contamination

3.3. Minimise the generation of wastes

3.4. Ensure the safe disposal of biohazardous materials and other laboratory wastes in accordance with enterprise procedures

4. Maintain laboratory records

4.1. Make entries on report forms or into computer systems, accurately recording or transcribing required data as required

4.2. Maintain instrument logs as required by accreditation checklists

4.3. Maintain records of blood and blood products received, used and returned to supplier

4.4. Maintain security and confidentiality of all clinical information, laboratory data and records

5. Issue blood and blood products

5.1. Complete documentation required to permit the issuing of blood or blood components that have been cleared for use by clinical staff

5.2. Advise courier of transport requirements to ensure blood or blood products are delivered in a timely and safe manner

Required Skills

Required skills

Required skills include:

following the laboratory's validated and authorised procedures

selecting and applying testing procedures in terms of the suspected or known nature of the antibody and its possible range of testing behaviours

detecting and recording accurate evidence of blood group antigen and antibody reactions

selecting, testing and issuing blood cleared for transfusion

selecting and applying confirmatory tests as required

selecting and issuing blood products for therapeutic or prophylactic use

critically analysing information/documents and recognising problems in systems and documentation

using enterprise information systems efficiently

preparing documentation that is accurate, concise and in accordance with enterprise requirements

managing tasks and organising work to ensure the timely release of blood and blood products

using samples, reagents and materials economically and disposing of wastes safely

using equipment safely

maintaining equipment, recording and report malfunctions appropriately

Required knowledge

Required knowledge includes:

scientific, medical, clinical, technical and workplace terminology relevant to normal and abnormal anatomy, physiology, biochemistry, immunology and immunohaematology

antigen antibody reactions

testing procedures for the determination of blood groups and the detection of antibodies

types of blood products and their use

validated and authorised procedures, as described in the laboratory's manual of procedures

relevant health, safety and environment requirements

Evidence Required

The Evidence Guide provides advice on assessment and must be read in conjunction with the performance criteria, required skills and knowledge, range statement and the Assessment Guidelines for the Training Package.

Overview of assessment

Critical aspects for assessment and evidence required to demonstrate competency in this unit

Assessors should ensure that candidates can:

perform tests accurately and organise work so that the needs of all relevant patients and clients are met in a timely fashion

detect and record accurate evidence of blood group antigen and antibody reactions

recognise problems in systems and documentation

use enterprise information systems efficiently

critically analyse information/documents

prepare documentation that is accurate, concise and in accordance with enterprise requirements

manage tasks and organise work to ensure the timely release of blood and blood products, as they complete routine tasks

use samples, reagents and materials economically and dispose of wastes safely

use equipment safely

maintain equipment, recording and report malfunctions appropriately.

Context of and specific resources for assessment

This unit of competency is to be assessed in the workplace or simulated workplace environment.

This unit of competency may be assessed with:

MSL934002A Apply quality system and continuous improvement processes

MSL975002A Perform haematological tests.

Resources may include:

standard transfusion/immunohaematology laboratory with relevant equipment, samples and reagents

enterprise procedures, test methods and equipment manuals.

Under duty of care requirements, off-the-job training providers should ensure that blood samples are known to be antibody free for hepatitis B and C, syphilis and human immunodeficiency virus (HIV), but this does not preclude the use of universal precautions in the use of blood samples.

Method of assessment

The following assessment methods are suggested:

review of results/data/records generated by the candidate

feedback from peers and supervisors that enterprise procedures were followed and that work is consistently performed in line with enterprise requirements

oral and/or written tests and paper problems associated with ABO group determination, antibody identification and record keeping

integrated assessment with a case focus, such as the routine pre-transfusion cross-match, an antenatal antibody detection and preliminary identification, batch of routine ABO and Rh(D) groups to be completed at the same time as completion of a pre-transfusion battery of tests.

In all cases, practical assessment should be supported by questions to assess underpinning knowledge and those aspects of competency which are difficult to assess directly.

Where applicable, reasonable adjustment must be made to work environments and training situations to accommodate ethnicity, age, gender, demographics and disability.

Access must be provided to appropriate learning and/or assessment support when required.

The language, literacy and numeracy demands of assessment should not be greater than those required to undertake the unit of competency in a work like environment.

This competency in practice

Industry representatives have provided the case study below to illustrate the practical application of this unit of competency and to show its relevance in a workplace setting.

Biomedical

A patient's blood sample and request form have been brought to the laboratory. The patient is to undergo elective surgery the next afternoon. The technical officer has been asked by the supervisor to determine the patient's ABO and Rh(D) blood groups, to screen the sample for irregular blood group antibodies and to cross-match two units of packed red cells in readiness for possible use during or after surgery. The technical officer checks the records for information on the patient. Finding none, they prepare the required data in the laboratory databases and then perform the required tests. They do not detect any irregular antibody and have had no difficulty in choosing suitable units for cross-matching. They complete the required documentation and labels and then store the compatible blood units for possible later use.


Range Statement

The range statement relates to the unit of competency as a whole. It allows for different work environments and situations that may affect performance. Bold italicised wording, if used in the performance criteria, is detailed below. Essential operating conditions that may be present with training and assessment (depending on the work situation, needs of the candidate, accessibility of the item, and local industry and regional contexts) may also be included.

Codes of practice

Where reference is made to industry codes of practice, and/or Australian/international standards, it is expected the latest version will be used

Standards, codes, procedures and/or enterprise requirements

Standards, codes, procedures and/or enterprise requirements may include:

Australian and international standards, such as:

AS 2252 Biological safety cabinets

AS ISO 17025-2005 General requirements for the competence of testing and calibration laboratories

AS/NZS 2243 Set:2006 Safety in laboratories set

AS/NZS 2982.1:1997 Laboratory design and construction - General requirements

AS/NZS ISO 14000 Set:2005 Environmental management standards set

AS/NZS ISO 9000 Set:2008 Quality management systems set

cleaning, hygiene and personal hygiene requirements

enterprise procedures, standard operating procedures (SOPs) and operating manuals

guidelines, policies and business rules of the Australian Red Cross Blood Service that are operable from time to time

Human Tissue Acts and regulations operable in Australian jurisdictions

incident and accident/injury reports

instructions to comply with legislation, standards, guidelines and codes

Guidelines for Pre-transfusion Testing, published by the Australasian Society of Blood Transfusion

quality system and continued improvement processes

safety requirements for equipment, materials or products

sampling procedures (labelling, preparation, storage, transport and disposal)

schematics, work flow and, laboratory layouts

statutory and enterprise occupational health and safety (OHS) requirements

stock records and inventory

test procedures (validated and authorised)

training program contents

waste minimisation, containment, processing and disposal procedures

Equipment, materials and systems

Equipment, materials and systems may include:

centrifuges, light boxes, calibrated pipettes, water baths, incubators and microscopes

laboratory information management systems (LIMS), computer databases, record and filing systems

general laboratory glassware and equipment identified with a serology laboratory

antisera and phenotyped red cells and other relevant reagents

gel systems

Communication

Communication may involve:

supervisors and managers (laboratory, quality and customer service)

other laboratory or relevant medical or nursing personnel

patients and clients

external auditors, or accreditation agency (e.g. National Association of Testing Authorities (NATA))

couriers

Occupational health and safety (OHS) and environmental management requirements

OHS and environmental management requirements:

all operations must comply with enterprise OHS and environmental management requirements, which may be imposed through state/territory or federal legislation - these requirements must not be compromised at any time

all operations assume the potentially hazardous nature of samples and require standard precautions to be applied

where relevant, users should access and apply current industry understanding of infection control issued by the National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC) and State and Territory Departments of Health


Sectors

Unit sector

Testing


Employability Skills

This unit contains employability skills.


Licensing Information

Not applicable.