In 2004, the medical device agency advised that nasogastric tube (NGT) position should be confirmed using pH sticks or papers(1). However, pH strips and sticks have limited evidence for validity or reliability. This study determines nurses' accuracy in assessing pH of a series of solutions using pH strips. Particularly, the identification of pH 5.5 or 6 in accordance with the thresholds used in current national guidance(2, 3) on identifying NGT position. Nine buffered solutions of pH 3–7 rising in 0.5 increments were produced by the biochemistry department and randomly assigned to 1 of 34 pots. Half of the sample had a pH ⩽5.5 with double blinding to both participants and researcher. Ten nurses were asked to measure and record the pH of the solutions using a Merck 2–9 strip. Nurses were incorrect in 30% of pH measurements. At pH 6, 12% of the sample were identified as having a pH 5.5. The reliability and validity of the strip was good as confirmed by KAPPA; however, specificity and sensitivity was poor at pH 6 (64.7%) but better at pH 5.5 (88%), as determined by a receiver operator characteristic (ROC) curve. In this study, use of pH sticks to determine a pH threshold of 5.5 means 12% of pH 6 measurements will be misclassified as gastric when they could be respiratory. Adoption of a gastric pH threshold of ⩽5.0 would have prevented any theoretically mal-positioned tubes being used.
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