Medical Devices for Measuring Respiratory Rate in Children: a Review

Authors

  • William Daw Respiratory Unit, Sheffield Children’s Hospital
  • Ruth Kingshott Respiratory Unit, Sheffield Children’s Hospital
  • Reza Saatchi Faculty of ACES, Sheffield Hallam University
  • Derek Burke Emergency Department, Sheffield Children’s Hospital
  • Alan Holloway Faculty of ACES, Sheffield Hallam University
  • Jon Travis Faculty of ACES, Sheffield Hallam University
  • Rob Evans Faculty of ACES, Sheffield Hallam University
  • Anthony Jones Faculty of ACES, Sheffield Hallam University
  • Ben Hughes School of Mechanical Engineering, Sheffield University
  • Heather Elphick Respiratory Unit, Sheffield Children’s Hospital

Keywords:

Respiratory rate, Monitoring, Measurement, Children, Medical devices

Abstract

Respiratory rate is an important vital sign used for diagnosing illnesses in children as well as prioritising patient care. All children presenting acutely to hospital should have a respiratory rate measured as part of their initial and ongoing assessment. However measuring the respiratory rate remains a subjective assessment and in children can be liable to measurement error especially if the child is uncooperative. Devices to measure respiratory rate exist but many provide only an estimate of respiratory rate due to the associated methodological complexities. Some devices are used within the intensive care, post-operative or more specialised investigatory settings none however have made their way into the everyday clinical setting. A non-contact device may be better tolerated in children and not cause undue stress distorting the measurement. Further validation and adaption to the acute clinical setting is needed before such devices can supersede current methods.

Downloads

Published

2016-05-30

Issue

Section

Articles