Date of Doctor of Nursing Practice Project Completion
Spring 5-2026
Faculty Advisor
Dr. Lisa W. Thomas
Abstract
Improving the Quality of Bone Marrow Specimen Collection Through Powered Bone Marrow Device Simulation and Supervised Procedures
Purpose
This quality improvement (QI) project aimed to implement powered bone marrow simulation training and supervised procedures for the Advanced Practice Provider (APP) proceduralists to increase proceduralists' use of powered bone marrow devices and reduce poor bone marrow sampling.
Background
This project was implemented within the Bone Marrow Aspiration Clinic (BMAC) of an academic cancer center in Houston, Texas.
Methodology
Five APP proceduralists completed powered bone marrow device simulation training on the Bone Marrow (BM) Skills Simulator, followed by supervised procedures. Data were collected for six weeks post-intervention.
Results
Results showed that the poor BM sampling mean post-intervention decreased by 4.82% (mean=22.16%, median=22.5%, n=20). The pre-intervention's mean was 26.98% (median=27.93%, n=44). Post-intervention use of powered bone marrow devices had a mean of 6.42% (n=7) with a baseline of 0%.
Implications
Powered bone marrow device simulation training using a BM Skills Simulator and supervised procedures can enhance APP proceduralists' ability to collect better quality samples and improve BMAC patient outcomes by reducing unfavorable consequences related to poor BM sampling. Additional participants, time for intervention, and data collection are needed to mitigate the project's limitations and provide better insight into the effectiveness of this intervention.
Keywords
bone marrow, inadequate bone marrow samples, quality improvement, simulation
Recommended Citation
Ethel C. Estrada, "Improving the Quality of Bone Marrow Specimen Collection Through Powered Bone Marrow Device Simulation and Supervised Procedures" (2026). Doctor of Nursing Practice Final Project Abstract. 105.
https://digitalcommons.library.tmc.edu/dnp_abstract/105