Assessing the Quality of Manual Respiratory Rate Measurements using Mobile Devices

2014 
We have designed a mobile device application (RRate), to provide an efficient measurement of respiratory rate with clinically acceptable accuracy. The method is based on analysis of multiple consecutive breath intervals. We investigated in this study the difference in measurement variability between breaths as a representative of recording quality. Respiratory rate of 322 children aged 0 - 12 years at a Ugandan rural health centre were recorded using the RRate mobile application, and compared to respiratory rate recordings obtained from 22 volunteers using the RRate application while observing 10 videos of children breathing in a lab setting. The variability of the recorded breaths (confidence) of both groups follow a similar Weibull distribution. However, we observed a trend towards higher variability in the data obtained in the field (median 89.7% confidence) compared to the data obtained in the laboratory setting (median 92.6% confidence). This suggests that it is more difficult to obtain consistent measurements when assessing patients in a clinical setting, and therefore the confidence in the measured respiratory rate is reduced. The mobile device application provided a respiratory rate value up to 6 times faster than the current practice of one minute counting. The measure of variability between individual measured breaths provided a powerful way to display confidence in a measurement.
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