Temperature measurement: comparison of non‐invasive methods used in adult critical care

Apr 21, 2005Journal of clinical nursing

Comparing Non-Invasive Ways to Measure Body Temperature in Critically Ill Adults

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Abstract

Approximately 75.2% of chemical thermometer readings were within a ±0.0-0.4 degrees C range of the pulmonary artery catheter.

  • Both the chemical and tympanic thermometers showed significant correlation with pulmonary artery catheter temperatures (r = 0.81 and r = 0.59, respectively).
  • The limits of agreement for the chemical thermometer were -0.5 to 0.9 degrees C, while the tympanic thermometer had limits of -1.2 to 1.2 degrees C.
  • A mean temperature difference of 0.2 degrees C was noted with the chemical thermometer, increasing to 0.4 degrees C when used with a warming blanket.
  • 15.3% of chemical and 21.1% of tympanic readings could potentially lead to delayed patient interventions.
  • Conversely, 28.8% of chemical and 37.8% of tympanic readings might result in unnecessary interventions.

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