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Nonpharmacological Methods for Children in Procedural Pain

The Effect of Three Different Methods on Venipuncture Pain and Anxiety in Children: Distraction Cards, Virtual Reality, and Buzzy® (Randomized Controlled Trial)

Status
Completed
Phases
NA
Study type
Interventional
Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Registry ID
NCT04421430
Enrollment
160
Registered
2020-06-09
Start date
2017-11-16
Completion date
2018-08-14
Last updated
2020-06-09

For informational purposes only — not medical advice. Sourced from public registries and may not reflect the latest updates. Terms

Conditions

Procedural Pain, Procedural Anxiety

Keywords

Anxiety, Children, Nursing, Acute pain management

Brief summary

The aim of this study was to determine the effect of the distraction cards, virtual reality and Buzzy® methods on venipuncture pain and anxiety in children aged 7-12 years.

Detailed description

The International Guide to Pediatric Anesthesia (Good Practice in Postoperative and Procedural Pain) recommends pharmacological and nonpharmacological methods to effectively manage and prevent acute procedural pain in children. Nonpharmacological methods alone or in combination with pharmacological methods help reduce pain, and therefore, have become popular especially in recent years. For pain management, nonpharmacological methods are easy to use, and cost- and time-effective methods with no side effects. Studies have evaluated a large number of pharmacological and nonpharmacological interventions for procedural pain management in children. However, most of those interventions are not used by healthcare professionals because they are expensive, time-consuming or hard to use. Therefore, easy-to-use, practical, non-invasive, cost-effective, and reusable nonpharmacological methods, such as distraction cards, virtual reality and Buzzy®, can be used especially in acute settings.

Interventions

The distraction cards contain various hidden pictures and patterns which are visible only when looked at carefully. During a procedure, the child is expected to focus on the cards and answer the questions asked about what they see in them. Just before the venipuncture, the researcher showed the distraction cards participants the distraction cards and asked them to check them and then asked them questions about what they saw on the cards and kept asking questions until the end of the venipuncture. The distraction cards intervention and venipuncture were terminated at the same time.

OTHERVirtual reality

The virtual reality participants put on the virtual reality glasses and headsets about two minutes before the venipuncture and watched the 3D Dinosaur Animation movie throughout the procedure. The virtual reality intervention and venipuncture were terminated at the same time.

OTHERBuzzy

Buzzy® applies high frequency vibration and concentrated cold at injection site for procedural pain management and distraction before the shot in children and adults. Buzzy® was placed on the injection site (antecubital fossa) of the Buzzy® participants, and cold application and vibration was turned on 60 seconds before the procedure. After the 60 seconds, the nurse moved Buzzy® about 3 cm above the injection site and applied a tourniquet and performed the procedure. Buzzy® was on throughout the procedure. The Buzzy® intervention and venipuncture were terminated at the same time.

Sponsors

Istanbul Medeniyet University
Lead SponsorOTHER

Study design

Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Intervention model
PARALLEL
Primary purpose
SUPPORTIVE_CARE
Masking
SINGLE (Investigator)

Intervention model description

Participants were randomized into the experimental and control groups using a block randomization method. Literature shows that age, gender, and fear are three factors affecting procedural pain and anxiety in children (Ball, Bindler, & Cowen, 2010; Twycross, 2009). Therefore, the variables of age (7-9 and 10-12 years), gender (girls and boys), and fear of procedure (yes and no) were used for block randomization. The blocks were repeated five times in each group (2X2X2X5), and 40 participants were assigned to each. The sealed envelope method was used to randomly assign participants to the groups.

Eligibility

Sex/Gender
ALL
Age
7 Years to 12 Years
Healthy volunteers
Yes

Inclusion criteria

* Due to undergo venipuncture for blood testing * Suitable for venipuncture at antecubital location using a 21 Gauge X 1.5 inch needle * Due to undergo venipuncture under the same environmental conditions (phlebotomy seat, heat, light, noise, etc.) * Due to undergo venipuncture at the first attempt

Exclusion criteria

Children; * had chronic diseases * had neuro-developmentally delayed * had visual, audio, or speech impairments * were hospital stay for treatment * had a history of sedative, analgesic or narcotic use within 24 hours before admission

Design outcomes

Primary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Visual Analog Scale (VAS)Through painful procedure completion, an average of 10 minutesThe VAS is used to measure and monitor pain intensity. VAS is a 10 cm or 100 mm long horizontal or vertical line with anchor statements no pain or pain at its least at the left-most end and unbearable pain or worst pain imaginable at the right-most end. The participant is asked to mark a point on the line that best represents their pain level. The VAS score is determined by measuring (in cm) the distance of the mark from the left end of the line. VAS is an easy-to-understand and easy-to-measure scale for children aged 7 and over.
Wong-Baker FACES Pain Rating Scale (WB-FACES)Through painful procedure completion, an average of 10 minutesThe WB-FACES was developed by Wong and Baker in 1981 and revised in 1983. The scale is used to diagnose pain in children aged 3-18 years. It consists of six facial expressions, each one representing an increasing degree of pain scored on a scale 0 to 5 from left to right (0 = very happy/no pain, 5 = the worst pain imaginable). The first face is a happy face representing no pain (0) while the last face is a crying face representing the worst pain imaginable (5). Higher scores indicate low pain tolerance. Participants are asked to choose the facial expression that best represents their pain.
Children's Fear Scale (CFS)Through painful procedure completion, an average of 10 minutesThe CFS was developed by McMurtry et al. (2011) to measure fear and anxiety in children. It consists of five facial expressions that represent a range from neutral (0) to extreme fear (4). Both researchers and family members can use the CFS to measure fear and anxiety in children before and during procedures

Countries

Turkey (Türkiye)

Outcome results

None listed

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov · Data processed: Feb 24, 2026