PBM: The Why—Better Yet, the Why Not?

This lecture offers the following credit types: CME, P.A.C.E.®


 

This video lecture will review patient blood management (PBM) and its evolution to “blood health.”

Originally presented at the University of Utah Department of Pathology Patient Blood Management Master Class during May 2025.


Lecture Presenter

Carolyn Burns, MD

Carolyn Burns, MD

CMO and Co-Founder
Collaborative Clinical Consulting, LLC
Immediate Past President
Society for the Advancement of Patient Blood Management (SABM)

Carolyn Burns, MD, is a board-certified pathologist (AP/CP) who served as medical director and chief of pathology at the Jewish Hospital Healthcare System in Louisville, Kentucky, from 1991-2011, which included the medical directorships of surgical pathology, the clinical laboratory, and the transfusion/tissue services for the five-hospital system. She was an assistant clinical professor in the Department of Pathology at the University of Louisville and served on the advisory board and as a guest lecturer for the Bellarmine University Clinical Laboratory Science Program.

After earning her undergraduate degree in microbiology and her medical degree, Dr. Burns completed an internship in general surgery followed by a pathology residency at the University of Louisville. Dr. Burns is the immediate past president of the Society for the Advancement of Patient Blood Management.

Dr. Burns is an active member of several medical societies, including AABB and IARS. She has authored numerous publications in peer-reviewed journals and textbooks and is often sought after as a speaker, both nationally and internationally, regarding patient blood management and transfusion practices.

She serves as a patient blood management physician advisor/consultant working with numerous hospitals and systems throughout the U.S. She is the CMO and co-founder of Collaborative Clinical Consulting, LLC, which provides PBM education, implementation services, and perioperative assessment.


Objectives

After this presentation, participants will be able to:

  • Summarize the evolution of PBM with emphasis on the pillars of PBM and the concept of blood health
  • Identify the published global definition of PBM and the WHO policy urging the need for PBM
  • Review the current state of the science regarding restrictive transfusion practice as part of PBM
  • Illustrate the necessity of a multiprofessional, multidisciplinary approach to delivering and maintaining blood health as a standard of care

Sponsored by:

Spencer Fox Eccles School of Medicine at the University of Utah, Department of Pathology,
and ARUP Laboratories