Emerging Infectious Diseases (Nov 2010)

Comparison of 3 Infrared Thermal Detection Systems and Self-Report for Mass Fever Screening

  • An V. Nguyen,
  • Nicole J. Cohen,
  • Harvey Lipman,
  • Clive M. Brown,
  • Noelle-Angelique Molinari,
  • William L. Jackson,
  • Hannah L. Kirking,
  • Paige Szymanowski,
  • Todd W. Wilson,
  • Bisan A. Salhi,
  • Rebecca R. Roberts,
  • David W. Stryker,
  • Daniel B. Fishbein

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3201/eid1611.100703
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 16, no. 11
pp. 1710 – 1717

Abstract

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Despite limited evidence regarding their utility, infrared thermal detection systems (ITDS) are increasingly being used for mass fever detection. We compared temperature measurements for 3 ITDS (FLIR ThermoVision A20M [FLIR Systems Inc., Boston, MA, USA], OptoTherm Thermoscreen [OptoTherm Thermal Imaging Systems and Infrared Cameras Inc., Sewickley, PA, USA], and Wahl Fever Alert Imager HSI2000S [Wahl Instruments Inc., Asheville, NC, USA]) with oral temperatures (>100°F = confirmed fever) and self-reported fever. Of 2,873 patients enrolled, 476 (16.6%) reported a fever, and 64 (2.2%) had a confirmed fever. Self-reported fever had a sensitivity of 75.0%, specificity 84.7%, and positive predictive value 10.1%. At optimal cutoff values for detecting fever, temperature measurements by OptoTherm and FLIR had greater sensitivity (91.0% and 90.0%, respectively) and specificity (86.0% and 80.0%, respectively) than did self-reports. Correlations between ITDS and oral temperatures were similar for OptoTherm (ρ = 0.43) and FLIR (ρ = 0.42) but significantly lower for Wahl (ρ = 0.14; p<0.001). When compared with oral temperatures, 2 systems (OptoTherm and FLIR) were reasonably accurate for detecting fever and predicted fever better than self-reports.

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