Objective
To evaluate the accuracy of ACCUFLOW an infusion rate monitor as compared to manual reading in pediatric surgical patients.
Methods
An observational study in 47 pediatric patients undergoing elective surgical procedures and needing an intravenous fluid with
expected duration of infusion of at least one hour. The infusion rate was adjusted to the required flow rate with the help
of the display on the ACCUFLOW. The flow rate as indicated by the ACCUFLOW display was checked every15 minutes till the end
of one hour. A simultaneous record of manual readings was also made.
Results
A total of 470 observations were made over the one hour observation period. The infusion rate as observed on the LCD display
of the ACCUFLOW compared well with manual reading. A Bland Altman analysis showed the bias between the readings with the two
methods to be very small and that there is no significant difference between the methods over the drop rate of 61–74 drops/min.
In addition an alarm was heard in 9 cases. The alarm was mainly because of no flow or excess flow (3 cases each). Other causes
for the alarm included slow flow, faulty IV lines showing fluctuations in flow rate and drip chamber not placed properly (1
patient each).
Conclusion
ACCUFLOW is a low cost device that can be used to adjust and monitor the infusion flow rate. The alarm would alert the nursing
staff when there is deviation from the preset rate of infusion. ACCUFLOW could thus be an attractive option for infusion rate
monitoring in developing countries with limited healthcare resources and skewed patient nurse ratios. However applicability
to infants and younger children and for longer infusions needs to be determined.
Key words Infusion rate - Infusion monitor - Medication errors