Ba. Jones et al., BEDSIDE GLUCOSE MONITORING - A COLLEGE-OF-AMERICAN-PATHOLOGISTS Q-PROBES STUDY OF THE PROGRAM CHARACTERISTICS AND PERFORMANCE IN 605 INSTITUTIONS, Archives of pathology and laboratory medicine, 117(11), 1993, pp. 1080-1087
Citations number
35
Categorie Soggetti
Pathology,"Medical Laboratory Technology","Medicine, Research & Experimental
In 1991, the College of American Pathologists' Q-Probes quality improv
ement program studied precision, accuracy, and program characteristics
of bedside glucose monitoring (BGM) in 605 institutions. Precision me
asurements made in 569 institutions were based on 15 950 quality contr
ol results. Precision, expressed as a percentage coefficient of variat
ion, was less than 10 in almost 90% of the institutions. For accuracy,
4517 BGM results from 181 institutions were compared with clinical la
boratory glucose results. Approximately 58% of BGM results were within
+/-10% and 75% of BGM results were within +/-15% of the corresponding
clinical laboratory results. Program characteristics associated with
better performance were (1) laboratorian program responsibility, labor
atorian BGM test performance, and laboratorian involvement in training
; (2) a policy requiring repeated scheduled operator training and/or p
erformance review; (3) use of an internal comparison program; and (4)
participation in an external proficiency testing program. We conclude
that BGM frequently does not meet quality goals and provide recommenda
tions on how BGM programs can be improved.