“…4 However, the 30-minute rule as a time-based surrogate for temperature monitoring of RBC concentrates does not take into account a multitude of parameters besides time that influence individual RBC concentrate warming: volume and width of the RBC concentrate storage bag, thermal isolation (eg, air cushion envelopes), sample handling, and exact storage and ambient temperatures the RBC concentrates are exposed to, including variations in air conditioning and solar radiation. [5][6][7][8] In addition, the dynamics of RBC concentrate warming also depend on the number of units packed together. 9 Thus, time-based rules potentially contribute to unnecessary wastage, since RBC concentrates will be discarded even if core temperature is still within acceptable limits, and may be detrimental for patient safety, since RBC concentrates with elevated core temperatures may remain undetected.…”