Wearing surgical face mask has no significant impact on auscultation assessment

Author:

Folnožić Ivana1,Gomerčić Palčić Marija12,Sabljak Matilda2,Vučak Ena1,Vrbanić Luka1,Mandić Perić Marija1,Mrsić Fanika3,Šikić Aljoša4,Ivanovski Ivan5

Affiliation:

1. Division of Pulmonology, Department of Internal Medicine, Sestre Milosrdnice University Hospital Center, Zagreb, Croatia

2. School of Medicine, University of Zagreb, Zagreb, Croatia

3. Division of Clinical Immunology and Rheumatology, Department of Internal Medicine, Sestre Milosrdnice University Hospital Center, Zagreb, Croatia

4. Department of Emergency Medicine, Sestre Milosrdnice University Hospital Center, Zagreb, Croatia

5. Department of Anesthesiology, Sestre Milosrdnice University Hospital Center, Zagreb, Croatia

Abstract

Objective During the COVID-19 pandemic, universal mask-wearing became one of the main public health interventions. Because of this, most physical examinations, including lung auscultation, were done while patients were wearing surgical face masks. The aim of this study was to investigate whether mask wearing has an impact on pulmonologist assessment during auscultation of the lungs. Methods This was a repeated measures crossover design study. Three pulmonologists were instructed to auscultate patients with previously verified prolonged expiration, wheezing, or crackles while patients were wearing or not wearing masks (physician and patients were separated by an opaque barrier). As a measure of pulmonologists’ agreement in the assessment of lung sounds, we used Fleiss kappa (K). Results There was no significant difference in agreement on physician assessment of lung sounds in all three categories (normal lung sound, duration of expiration, and adventitious lung sound) whether the patient was wearing a mask or not, but there were significant differences among pulmonologists when it came to agreement of lung sound assessment. Conclusion Clinicians and health professionals are safer from respiratory infections when they are wearing masks, and patients should be encouraged to wear masks because our research proved no significant difference in agreement on pulmonologists’ assessment of auscultated lung sounds whether or not patients wore masks.

Publisher

PeerJ

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