4.6 Article

Studying the Accuracy and Function of Different Thermometry Techniques for Measuring Body Temperature

Journal

BIOLOGY-BASEL
Volume 10, Issue 12, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/biology10121327

Keywords

body temperature; remote monitoring; biosensor; thermometry; infrared thermometer; digital thermometer; tympanic thermometer; zero heat flux thermometer; infrared thermography

Categories

Funding

  1. Peter Wall Institute for Advanced Studies [PHAX-GR017213]

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This study compared seven different commercially available thermometers with a medical-grade thermometer to determine the most accurate thermometry technique for regular body temperature measurement. The findings indicated that tympanic thermometers were the most accurate for this purpose, providing valuable self-assessment tools for individuals to help mitigate the spread of infectious diseases like COVID-19.
Simple Summary Core body temperature can provide a method for the early diagnosis of viral infections such as COVID-19. The current pandemic has highlighted the need for an accurate method for body temperature screening. The purpose of this study was to determine which thermometry technique is the most accurate for the regular measurement of body temperature. We compared seven different commercially available thermometers with a gold standard medical-grade thermometer. Our study showed that not all temperature monitoring systems are equal, and suggested that tympanic thermometers are the most accurate commercially available system for the regular measurement of body temperature. Tympanic thermometers can help individuals with regular self-assessment of their body temperature, which is a useful tool for lowering the spread of infectious diseases such as COVID-19. The purpose of this study was to determine which thermometry technique is the most accurate for regular measurement of body temperature. We compared seven different commercially available thermometers with a gold standard medical-grade thermometer (Welch-Allyn): four digital infrared thermometers (Wellworks, Braun, Withings, MOBI), one digital sublingual thermometer (Braun), one zero heat flux thermometer (3M), and one infrared thermal imaging camera (FLIR One). Thirty young healthy adults participated in an experiment that altered core body temperature. After baseline measurements, participants placed their feet in a cold-water bath while consuming cold water for 30 min. Subsequently, feet were removed and covered with a blanket for 30 min. Throughout the session, temperature was recorded every 10 min with all devices. The Braun tympanic thermometer (left ear) had the best agreement with the gold standard (mean error: 0.044 degrees C). The FLIR One thermal imaging camera was the least accurate device (mean error: -0.522 degrees C). A sign test demonstrated that all thermometry devices were significantly different than the gold standard except for the Braun tympanic thermometer (left ear). Our study showed that not all temperature monitoring techniques are equal, and suggested that tympanic thermometers are the most accurate commercially available system for the regular measurement of body temperature.

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