[article] Title : | Precision, Sensitivity and Patient Preference of Non-Invasive Thermometers in a : Pediatric Surgical Acute Care Setting | Material Type: | printed text | Publication Date: | 2017 | Article on page: | p.36-41 | Languages : | English (eng) Original Language : English (eng) | in Journal of Pediatric Nursing > Vol.35 No.4 (Jul-Aug) 2017 [09/04/2017] . - p.36-41Keywords: | Temporal artery thermometer, Pediatrics, Precision, Sensitivity, Preference | Abstract: | Purpose
The purpose of the project was to compare the temporal artery thermometer (TAT) to the digital probe thermometer readings at axillary or oral sites, to determine the relative precision and sensitivity of the three methods of thermometry, to compare their readings to core temperature when feasible, and to survey patient and family thermometer preferences.
Design & Methods
A randomized crossover design in a 70-bed surgical unit over eight months. Two sets of temperature measurements were obtained for each patient: TAT, axillary, oral (depending on patient ability) and a bladder temperature representing core body temperature (when available). Each method was used twice on each patient, to examine within-method precision. Following measurement, patients or caregivers provided their thermometer preference. For younger/nonverbal patients, a professional observer recorded a disruption score. N = 298 patients were enrolled
Results
TAT was more precise than oral and axillary thermometers (p < 0.001 vs. axillary, p = 0.001 vs. oral). TAT measurements were higher on average than axillary and oral, by 0.7 °C and 0.6 °C respectively (p < 0.001). TAT's disruption score for younger patients was 0.6 points lower on average than axillary (p < 0.001). 84% of patients and families who indicated a clear thermometry preference chose TAT. Only 3 patients had bladder-temperature devices, and therefore accuracy could not be analyzed.
Conclusions
TAT is more precise, more fever sensitive, less disruptive to younger children, and more preferred by patients and families. | Link for e-copy: | http://www.journals.elsevier.com/journal-of-pediatric-nursing/ | Record link: | http://libsearch.siu.ac.th/siu/opac_css/index.php?lvl=notice_display&id=27439 |
[article] Precision, Sensitivity and Patient Preference of Non-Invasive Thermometers in a : Pediatric Surgical Acute Care Setting [printed text] . - 2017 . - p.36-41. Languages : English ( eng) Original Language : English ( eng) in Journal of Pediatric Nursing > Vol.35 No.4 (Jul-Aug) 2017 [09/04/2017] . - p.36-41Keywords: | Temporal artery thermometer, Pediatrics, Precision, Sensitivity, Preference | Abstract: | Purpose
The purpose of the project was to compare the temporal artery thermometer (TAT) to the digital probe thermometer readings at axillary or oral sites, to determine the relative precision and sensitivity of the three methods of thermometry, to compare their readings to core temperature when feasible, and to survey patient and family thermometer preferences.
Design & Methods
A randomized crossover design in a 70-bed surgical unit over eight months. Two sets of temperature measurements were obtained for each patient: TAT, axillary, oral (depending on patient ability) and a bladder temperature representing core body temperature (when available). Each method was used twice on each patient, to examine within-method precision. Following measurement, patients or caregivers provided their thermometer preference. For younger/nonverbal patients, a professional observer recorded a disruption score. N = 298 patients were enrolled
Results
TAT was more precise than oral and axillary thermometers (p < 0.001 vs. axillary, p = 0.001 vs. oral). TAT measurements were higher on average than axillary and oral, by 0.7 °C and 0.6 °C respectively (p < 0.001). TAT's disruption score for younger patients was 0.6 points lower on average than axillary (p < 0.001). 84% of patients and families who indicated a clear thermometry preference chose TAT. Only 3 patients had bladder-temperature devices, and therefore accuracy could not be analyzed.
Conclusions
TAT is more precise, more fever sensitive, less disruptive to younger children, and more preferred by patients and families. | Link for e-copy: | http://www.journals.elsevier.com/journal-of-pediatric-nursing/ | Record link: | http://libsearch.siu.ac.th/siu/opac_css/index.php?lvl=notice_display&id=27439 |
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