Correction: The 49th Annual Meeting of the European Society for Blood and Marrow Transplantation: Pharmacist Committee—Poster Session (P716-P724)

Correction to: Bone Marrow Transplantation https://doi.org/10.1038/s41409-023-02061-w, published online 09 November 2023

In this article, the Results section of abstract P723 was incorrectly given as:

Results: Graph#1 shows frequency (percent) distribution of Demographic/Medical Record Profile of 290 respondents. After taking Hydroxyurea, responders were classified into three categories: complete responders (15.9%) who were independent of blood transfusion dependency; partial responders (27.6%) who remained on transfusion but with increased interval; and non-responders (56.6%) who remained on the same frequency of blood transfusion, after six months of treatment. After data analysis, it was revealed that there was no significant impact of Hydroxyurea therapy in improving social health which includes family interaction and school-functioning of the respondents (r = 0.081, p = 0.171). Similarly, a weak positive non-significant correlation exists between Hydroxyurea therapy and the performance of healthcare professionals in the hospital (r = 0.016; p = 0.782). Moreover, no significant improvement was observed in social health problems of BT patients by inducing moderating the role of healthcare professional performance (p = 0.0807 and 0.3367, respectively) as shown in Table 1. Coeff -Coefficient, SE-Standard error, LLCI-Lower level confidence interval, ULCI-Upper-level confidence interval, HEPH-Hydroxyurea Effect on Social Health.

Results: After taking Hydroxyurea, responders were classified into three categories: complete responders (15.9%) who were independent of blood transfusion dependency; partial responders (27.6%) who remained on transfusion but with increased interval; and non-responders (56.6%) who remained on the same frequency of blood transfusion, after six months of treatment. After data analysis, it was revealed that there was no significant impact of Hydroxyurea therapy in improving social health which includes family interaction and school-functioning of the respondents (r = 0.081, p = 0.171). Similarly, a weak positive non-significant correlation exists between Hydroxyurea therapy and the performance of healthcare professionals in the hospital (r = 0.016; p = 0.782). Moreover, no significant improvement was observed in social health problems of BT patients by inducing moderating the role of healthcare professional performance (p = 0.0807 and 0.3367, respectively) as shown in Table 1. Coeff -Coefficient, SE-Standard error, LLCI-Lower level confidence interval, ULCI-Upper-level confidence interval, HEPH-Hydroxyurea Effect on Social Health.

The first sentence was deleted. The original article has been corrected.

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