Preventing inadvertent hypothermia: comparing two protocols for preoperative forced-air warming
journal contribution
posted on 2023-05-17, 20:14authored byCobbe, K-A, Di Staso, R, Jed Duff, Walker, K, Draper, N
Preoperative forced-air warming is one way of preventing inadvertent perioperative hypothermia. There is scant evidence, however, on the best warming method or the acceptability of these methods to patients. This pilot study compared two warming protocols: one that commenced at maximum temperature and was titrated down as requested (A) and one that commenced at near body temperature and was titrated up as tolerated (B). A crossover design was used in which each participant (n = 10) received both protocols sequentially. The mean device temperature and length of time spent at maximum settings were greater for protocol A (43°C ± 0°C vs 41°C ± l°C, P = .003; and 60 ± vs 41.5 ± 2.8 minutes, P = . 004). There was no difference in thermal comfort scores, participant temperature, or sweating between the two protocols. When asked, participants preferred protocol A to B (70% to 30%). Starting at higher device settings appears the more favorable of the two approaches.
History
Publication title
Journal of PeriAnesthesia Nursing
Volume
27
Pagination
18-24
ISSN
1089-9472
Department/School
School of Nursing
Publisher
American Society of PeriAnesthesia Nurses
Place of publication
Sydney, Australia
Rights statement
Copyright 2012 by American Society of PeriAnesthesia Nurses