| Literature DB >> 35493782 |
Ahmed Ehsanur Rahman1,2, Shafiqul Ameen2, Aniqa Tasnim Hossain2, Sabrina Jabeen2, Tamanna Majid2, Azim Uddin Afm2, Tania Sultana Tanwi2, Goutom Banik3, Md Ziaul Haque Shaikh2, Md Jahurul Islam4, Sabina Ashrafee4, Husam Muhammad Shah Alam4, Ashfia Saberin4, Ehtesham Kabir Anm3, Sabbir Ahmed3, Mahbuba Khan5, Anisuddin Ahmed2, Qazi Sadeq-Ur Rahman2, Mohammod Jobayer Chisti2, Steve Cunningham1, Muhammad Shariful Islam4, David H Dockrell1, Harish Nair1, Shams El Arifeen2, Harry Campbell1.
Abstract
Background: Hypoxaemia is one of the strongest predictors of mortality among children with pneumonia. It can be identified through pulse oximetry instantaneously, which is a non-invasive procedure but can be influenced by factors related to the specific measuring device, health provider and patient. Following WHO's global recommendation in 2014, Bangladesh decided to introduce pulse oximetry in paediatric outpatient services, ie, the Integrated Management of Childhood Illness (IMCI) services in 2019. A national committee updated the existing IMCI implementation package and decided to test it by assessing the pulse oximetry performance of different types of assessors in real-life inpatient settings.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35493782 PMCID: PMC9041243 DOI: 10.7189/jogh.12.04036
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Glob Health ISSN: 2047-2978 Impact factor: 7.664
Background characteristics of the children hospitalised in Kushtia District Hospital and enrolled in the study (N = 739)
| Characteristics | Category | n | % |
|---|---|---|---|
| Age | 2-11 months | 386 | 52 |
| 12-59 months | 353 | 48 | |
| Sex | Male | 457 | 62 |
| Female | 282 | 38 | |
| Weight for age | Not underweight | 539 | 75 |
| Underweight (below -2SD) | 102 | 14 | |
| Severely underweight (below -3SD) | 81 | 11 | |
| Missing | 17 |
| |
| Diagnosis | Severe pneumonia or pneumonia | 407 | 55 |
| Others | 332 | 45 | |
| Type of assessor | Nurse | 451 | 61 |
| Paramedic | 288 | 39 |
SD – standard deviation
Figure 1Performance time to obtain a successful measurement of SpO2, presented in median time taken (in seconds) by device-, assessor- and patient-related factors (N = 1478).
Figure 2Performance time to obtain a successful measurement of SpO2 and proportion of successfully conducted pulse oximetry assessments within 60 seconds, presented in median time taken (in seconds) and in percentage (%) respectively, by individual assessors.
Figure 3Rates of obtaining a successful measurement of SpO2, presented in percentage by different cut-off time points, and by pulse oximetry device type, assessor type and age of the children (N = 1478).
Figure 4Associations between obtaining a successful measurement of SpO2 within 60 seconds and various device-, assessor- and patient-related factors, presented in adjusted odds ratio using a Generalised Estimating Equation (GEE) regression model (N = 1474).
Figure 5Agreement of identifying hypoxaemia using Lifebox and Masimo devices, presented in prevalence-adjusted and bias-adjusted kappa (PABAK) percentage with 95% CI by provider- and patient-related factors.
Figure 6Feedback on challenges of performing pulse oximetry on children by assessors, presented as percentage of assessors reporting very easy, easy, neither easy or challenging, challenging and very challenging for each statement (N = 18).