Abstract
BACKGROUND: Oxygen therapy is an important therapeutic resource for patients with hypoxemia. When changing oxygen flow meters, we have observed that sometimes, even with the same oxygen flow setting as before, a different SpO2 is obtained.
OBJECTIVE: To analyze the precision and accuracy of flow meters used in hospital settings.
METHODS: An experimental study was performed to test oxygen flow meters from a tertiary hospital, by using a calibrated flow analyzer. Used and new flow meter accuracy was tested by reading in the gas analyzer a single measurement at flow rates of 1, 3, 5, and 10 L/min in 91 flow meters, and they were compared using the Student t test or Mann-Whitney U test. Flow meter precision was tested by reading in the flow analyzer 3 repetitive measurements set at flow rates of 1, 3, 5, and 10 L/min in 11 flow meters, and the reproducibility of these measurements was conducted by using the intraclass correlation coefficient and the Friedman test.
RESULTS: The mean measured flow rates were slightly lower than the stipulated flow rate at 1 L/min, very close for 3 L/min, and higher for the 5 and 10 L/min flow rates. There was a large variability among the measurements from different flow meters, mainly at low flow rates (1 and 3 L/min). There was no difference between new and used flow meters at the flow rates measured, except at 10 L/min. Flow meters precision analysis showed a good reproducibility in 3 repetitive measurements for each flow rate (minimum 0.95, maximum 0.99 intraclass correlations).
CONCLUSIONS: The flow meters tested showed good precision and poor accuracy.
Footnotes
- Correspondence: José Roberto Jardim MD, Disciplina de Pneumologia/Universidade Federal de São Paulo Escola Paulista de Medicina, Rua Botucatu 740 3° Andar, São Paulo, 04039–002 Brazil. E-mail: jardimpneumo{at}gmail.com.
The authors have disclosed no conflicts of interest.
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