ABSTRACT
OBJECTIVES: To determine the accuracy of weighing ventilated infants on incubator scales and whether the accuracy can be improved by the addition of a ventilator tube compensator (VTC) device to counterbalance the force exerted by the ventilator tubing. STUDY DESIGN: Body weights on integral incubator scales were compared in ventilated infants (with and without a VTC), with body weights on standalone electronic scales (true weight). Individual and series of trend weights were obtained on the infants. The method of Bland and Altman was used to assess the introduced bias. RESULTS: The study included 60 ventilated infants; 66% of them weighed <1000âg. A total of 102 paired-weight datasets for 30 infants undergoing conventional ventilation and 30 undergoing high frequency oscillator ventilation (HFOV) supported by a SensorMedics oscillator, (with and without a VTC) were obtained. The mean differences and (95% CI for the bias) between the integral and true scale weighing methods was 60.8âg (49.1âg to 72.5âg) without and -2.8âg (-8.9âg to 3.3âg) with a VTC in HFOV infants; 41.0âg (32.1âg to 50.0âg) without and -5.1âg (-9.3âg to -0.8âg) with a VTC for conventionally ventilated infants. Differences of greater than 2% were considered clinically relevant and occurred in 93.8% without and 20.8% with a VTC in HFOV infants and 81.5% without and 27.8% with VTC in conventionally ventilated infants. CONCLUSIONS: The use of the VTC device represents a substantial improvement on the current practice for weighing ventilated infants, particularly in the extreme preterm infants where an over- or underestimated weight can have important clinical implications for treatment. A large-scale clinical trial to validate these findings is needed.
Subject(s)
Anthropometry/methods , Body Weight , High-Frequency Ventilation/instrumentation , Respiratory Distress Syndrome, Newborn/therapy , Anthropometry/instrumentation , Female , Humans , Incubators, Infant , Infant, Extremely Low Birth Weight , Infant, Newborn , Infant, Premature , Male , Pilot Projects , Respiration, Artificial/instrumentationABSTRACT
This prospective interventional study aimed at increasing knowledge and adherence to 4 infection control standards by visitors to a neonatal intensive care unit. Visitors were interviewed and observed for knowledge of and adherence to the standards pre- and postinstallation of an audiovisual display monitor, which demonstrates handwashing and delivers an auditory and written list of the standards. Handwashing adherence and watch removal improved from 79.2% to 100% and 67% to 89.7%, respectively. Recall of the standards increased from 19% to 81%.