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Jun 29, 2026

Automation for Quality: Reproducibility You Can Count On

Control+ALT+ABO: Automating Transfusion with Heart

Automation isn't just about speed — it's about consistency, safety and efficient workflows. This series explores how automated systems reshape immunohematology while keeping quality at the core.

 

Myth: Automation is mainly about saving time

Consistent Results

Time is precious, yes – but in transfusion medicine, consistency saves lives. The greatest strength of automation lies not in speed, but in its ability to deliver repeatable, reliable results efficiently. That's where its quality advantage becomes clear.

Why Standardization Matters in Laboratory Testing

Manual methods (pipetting, mixing, visual interpretation of agglutination) all depend on human technique. Small variations – a slightly off dilution, extra time of incubation, a subjective call of a weak + vs 1+ – can cause different results for the same sample. An apparent 2+ might look like a 3+ to another person; a weak positive might be missed at 2 AM by tired eyes. Automation erases much of this variation. It delivers the same result on Sunday at midnight as on Tuesday at noon – regardless of who’s on shift – by standardizing the testing process and interpretation criteria.

Better Clinical Decisions

This consistency matters for antibody screening, titrations, and crossmatches. When interpretation is uniform, clinicians get better information: fewer false positives/negatives and more confidence that a change in results (say, an increasing antibody titer) is real and not an artifact of technique. Consistent results support better clinical decisions, avoid unnecessary transfusions, and improve patient safety.

Facilitates Compliance

Beyond test results, consider the broader quality picture. Automated systems bring built-in traceability and quality control logs. Every pipette tip used, every reagent lot and expiration, every incubation time is tracked and documented. This makes internal audits and regulatory inspections (ISO standards, AABB, EU IVDR, etc.) much easier – you can demonstrate that procedures are followed exactly, every time. Compliance becomes less of a headache because the automation middleware records it all.

Better & Safer

Quality isn’t just a goal, it’s a process – and automation supports that process from the first sample scan to the final result. It minimizes opportunities for human error, flags deviations immediately (e.g. temperature out of range, reagent QC failure), and ensures that if something does go wrong, it’s noticed and documented. In short, automation in the blood bank isn’t about going faster (though it often does); it’s about being better and safer through uncompromising reproducibility.

Authored by Dr. Laziza Amniai