Accuracy of Patient-Collected Vital Signs.

IF 2.8 3区 医学 Q2 HEALTH CARE SCIENCES & SERVICES Telemedicine and e-Health Pub Date : 2024-11-01 Epub Date: 2024-08-16 DOI:10.1089/tmj.2023.0548
Joshua P Metlay, Ralph Gonzales, Timothy J Judson, Yuchiao Chang, Justin Margolin, Samir Oza, Blair A Parry, Michelle D Tagerman, Emily Hayden
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Abstract

Introduction: Telehealth has emerged as an important clinical setting for managing acute respiratory tract infections (ARIs), potentially reducing emergency department and urgent care overcrowding, and reducing nosocomial transmission. Many current algorithms for ARI management incorporate information on patient vital signs. However, the accuracy of vital signs collected by patients using readily available home devices and techniques has not been studied. Methods: A cross-sectional sample of patients seen for urgent conditions at a hospital emergency and urgent care center were given instructions and low-cost, readily available devices to collect their vital signs. A trained research coordinator collected a parallel set of vital signs using standard hospital equipment, serving as the gold standard. We analyzed the performance of patient-collected vital signs compared with vital signs collected by a trained research coordinator. Results: A total of 300 patients completed the study. Patient-collected vital signs were highly specific for traditional levels of abnormalities (HR >100 beats per min, RR >24 breaths per min, temperature >100.4 degrees Fahrenheit, oxygen saturation <94 percent); however, sensitivity was poor for elevated heart rate by pulse estimation (25%) and elevated respiratory rate (60%). Heart rate and oxygen saturation by pulse oximeter and oral temperature had higher sensitivity. Conclusions: Vital signs measured and provided by patients are not uniformly accurate, particularly when using manual techniques rather than automated devices. Telehealth algorithms that rely on these values could provide incorrect triage and management advice.

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病人收集的生命体征的准确性。
简介:远程医疗已成为管理急性呼吸道感染(ARI)的重要临床环境:远程医疗已成为管理急性呼吸道感染(ARI)的重要临床环境,有可能减少急诊科和紧急护理的拥挤程度,并减少非社会性传播。目前许多急性呼吸道感染管理算法都包含患者生命体征信息。然而,对患者使用现成的家用设备和技术收集的生命体征的准确性尚未进行研究。研究方法对在医院急诊和紧急护理中心就诊的急症患者进行横断面抽样调查,向他们提供收集生命体征的指导和低成本、现成的设备。一名训练有素的研究协调员使用标准的医院设备收集了一组平行的生命体征,作为金标准。我们对患者收集的生命体征与训练有素的研究协调员收集的生命体征进行了比较分析。研究结果共有 300 名患者完成了研究。患者收集的生命体征对传统水平的异常(心率大于 100 次/分、呼吸频率大于 24 次/分、体温大于 100.4 华氏度、血氧饱和度)具有高度特异性:患者测量和提供的生命体征并不都是准确的,尤其是在使用人工技术而非自动设备时。依赖于这些数值的远程医疗算法可能会提供错误的分诊和管理建议。
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来源期刊
Telemedicine and e-Health
Telemedicine and e-Health 医学-卫生保健
CiteScore
8.80
自引率
6.40%
发文量
270
审稿时长
2.3 months
期刊介绍: Telemedicine and e-Health is the leading peer-reviewed journal for cutting-edge telemedicine applications for achieving optimal patient care and outcomes. It places special emphasis on the impact of telemedicine on the quality, cost effectiveness, and access to healthcare. Telemedicine applications play an increasingly important role in health care. They offer indispensable tools for home healthcare, remote patient monitoring, and disease management, not only for rural health and battlefield care, but also for nursing home, assisted living facilities, and maritime and aviation settings. Telemedicine and e-Health offers timely coverage of the advances in technology that offer practitioners, medical centers, and hospitals new and innovative options for managing patient care, electronic records, and medical billing.
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