Abstract

BackgroundNCIT are non-invasive devices for fever screening in children. However, evidence of their accuracy for fever screening in adults is lacking. This study aimed to compare the accuracy of non-contact infrared thermometers (NCIT) with temporal artery thermometers (TAT) in an adult hospital.MethodsA prospective observational study was conducted on a convenience sample of non-infectious inpatients in 2 Australian hospitals. NCIT and TAT devices were used to collect body temperature recordings. Participant characteristics included age, gender, skin color, highest temperature, and antipyretic medications recorded in last 24-hour.ResultsIn 265 patients, a mean difference of ± 0.26°C was recorded between the NCIT (36.64°C) and the reference TAT (36.90°C) temperature devices. Bland-Altman analysis showed that NCIT and TAT temperatures were closely aligned at temperatures <37.5°C, but not at temperatures >37.5°C. NCIT had low sensitivity (16.13%) at temperatures ≥37.5°C. An AUROC score of 0.67 (SD 0.05) demonstrated poor accuracy of the NCIT device at temperatures ≥37.5°C.ConclusionThis is the first study to compare accuracy of NCIT thermometers to TAT in adult patients. Although mass fever screening is currently underway using NCIT, these results indicate that the NCIT may not be the most accurate device for fever mass screening during a pandemic.

Highlights

  • Body temperature is a vital sign that is regularly measured to assess the status of a patients’ health, facilitate diagnosis, and target treatments in a hospital setting

  • This study compared the accuracy of the non-contact infrared thermometers (NCIT) to the temporal artery thermometers (TAT), a noninvasive infrared thermometer widely used in hospitals

  • The Bland-Altman analysis showed that temperatures measured using the NCIT and the TAT were closely aligned at temperatures below 37.5°C but at temperatures ≥37.5°C, the mean differences widened considerably

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Summary

Introduction

Body temperature is a vital sign that is regularly measured to assess the status of a patients’ health, facilitate diagnosis, and target treatments in a hospital setting. Health care professionals must use the most accurate and precise measurement devices available to reproduce stable results reflecting core body temperature. NCIT are non-invasive devices for fever screening in children. Evidence of their accuracy for fever screening in adults is lacking. This study aimed to compare the accuracy of non-contact infrared thermometers (NCIT) with temporal artery thermometers (TAT) in an adult hospital. NCIT and TAT devices were used to collect body temperature recordings. Results: In 265 patients, a mean difference of § 0.26°C was recorded between the NCIT (36.64°C) and the reference TAT (36.90°C) temperature devices. Conclusion: This is the first study to compare accuracy of NCIT thermometers to TAT in adult patients.

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