To examine the efficacy of an immersive virtual reality distraction compared with an active non-immersive distraction, such as video games on a tablet, for pain and anxiety management and memory of pain and anxiety in children requiring percutaneous bone pins and/or suture removal procedures.
Three-centre randomized clinical trial using a parallel design with two groups: experimental and control.
Study to take place in the orthopaedic department of three children hospital of the Montreal region starting in 2019. Children, from 7-17 years old, requiring bone pins and/or suture removal procedures will be recruited. The intervention group (N = 94) will receive a virtual reality game (Dreamland), whereas the control group (N = 94) will receive a tablet with video games. The primary outcomes will be both the mean self-reported pain score measured by the Numerical Rating Scale and mean anxiety score, measured by the Child Fear Scale. Recalls of pain and anxiety will be measured 1 week after the procedure using the same scales. We aim to recruit 188 children to achieve a power of 80% with a significance level (alpha) of 5%.
While multiple pharmacological methods have previously been tested for children, no studies have evaluated the impact of immersive virtual reality distraction for pain and anxiety management in the orthopaedic setting.
Improved pain management can be achieved using virtual reality during medical procedures for children. This method is innovative, non-pharmacological, adapted to the hospital setting, and user-friendly.
NCT03680625, registered on clinicaltrials.gov.
© 2020 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.
About The Expert
Sylvie Le May
Argerie Tsimicalis
Melanie Noel
Pierre Rainville
Christelle Khadra
Ariane Ballard
Estelle Guingo
Casey Cotes-Turpin
Sofia Addab
Khadidja Chougui
Maxime Francoeur
Nicole Hung
Mitchell Bernstein
Stéphane Bouchard
Stefan Parent
Mathilde Hupin Debeurme
References
PubMed