Temporal Thermometer Cleaning

Specialties Critical

Published

Recently started a job in an ICU. We use temporal thermometers. What is everyone's' theory/practice on cleaning the thermometer between patients. Obviously for contact precautions, we cavi-wipe them every time we take them out of the room. What about between patients that are not on contact precautions? Interested to hear how everyone does this...

Specializes in Emergency.

We use alcohol wipes between non-isolation pts.

Using anything but alcohol wipes on the sensor will ruin it, according to the manufacturer, so be careful with those Cavi Wipes.

Specializes in Med-Surg.

We use alcohol swabs as well.

I hate temporal thermometers though and will use oral whenever possible.

I use what is probably like your cavi-whipes when I'm stripping down a room. We have thermometers in each room and I wish we had designated stethoscopes, not the cheap iso kind, in every room. I used those wipes on monitoring equipment, room phones, call lights, chairs. Just because the pt wasn't in iso doesn't mean no germs or mrsa/vre that we didn't test for. Plus, I don't sit and watch when the rooms get cleaned between pts. If you can't tell, I'm a germaphobe critical care nurse. :)

Thanks all. I do like the temporal thermometer for sleeping/trached patients. Just want to make sure I'm doing the right thing.

I usually use alcohol wipes or baby wipes after every use. But I have non-contact thermometers too which are very accurate.

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well alcohol and baby wipes are good but it is better if you follow the instruction from the manufacturer. You can also use a non-contact forehead thermometer. All you need to do it place the device on or near to your child's skin or to your patients skin, press the button and wait a few seconds for the readout to flash up on screen. This is perfect for use on a squirming and uncomfortable child who refuses to sit still, take a look at Thermee by GingerKids | Non-Contact Forehead Thermometer.

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