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The Effect of Therapeutic Play on Pain, Fear, Anxiety and Physiological Parameters and Parents' Satisfaction

Not Applicable
Completed
Conditions
Pain, Acute
Anxiety and Fear
Child Behavior
Interventions
Behavioral: Video game with headset
Registration Number
NCT06415188
Lead Sponsor
Selcuk University
Brief Summary

In this study, the effect of the therapeutic game applied before treatment on pain, fear, anxiety and physiological parameters and the satisfaction of the parents was investigated.

Detailed Description

Therapeutic play is defined as activities structured in accordance with children's age and development, or as a set of interventions to improve the well-being of children in the hospital environment. This method reduces the stress of illness or hospitalization, uses play as a means of self-expression and supports the development of positive coping mechanisms in pediatric patients. In the literature, it is seen that therapeutic play methods such as listening to music, drawing, reading stories, puppets, dolls, virtual reality tools, cartoon applications, watching videos and playing video games are used to reduce the child's pain and anxiety about invasive procedures. Studies conducted to reduce the interactions between children in the same environment during their treatment and care are quite limited. No study has been found to examine the effect of methods that jointly block/reduce vision and hearing during treatment and care on anxiety, fear and pain in children treated together in pediatric clinics.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
COMPLETED
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
40
Inclusion Criteria
  • Being in the 3-6 age group,
  • At least one day of inpatient treatment in the pediatric clinics of Selçuk Medical Faculty Hospital
  • At least one invasive intervention in the treatment plan
  • To be able to understand and speak Turkish
  • Staying in a room with at least two beds
Exclusion Criteria
  • Having a neurological disorder
  • Not having a parent as a companion
  • Receiving oral treatment only
  • Hearing and vision problems
  • Single bed capacity room or isolated room

For the Parent

Inclusion Criteria:

  • Staying with their child as a constant companion
  • To be able to understand and speak Turkish
  • Accepting to participate in the study

The exclusion criteria:

  • Not staying with your child all the time

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
PARALLEL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
Therapeutic play groupVideo game with headsetChildren in the experimental group received a therapeutic video game intervention in addition to the pre-treatment routine.
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Children's State Anxiety and Children's Fear ScaleFirst measurement: 1 minute before treatment

Children's State Anxiety and Children's Fear Scale was developed by McMurtry et al. in 2011. The scale was designed to measure the fear levels of children aged 4-10 years. The scale was translated into Turkish by Gerçeker et al. in 2018 and the validity-reliability coefficient was found to be 0.89. The scale score is formed by scoring five drawn facial expressions (0=no fear to 4=severe fear) shown visually to the child. Anxiety and fear scores of the child were scored one minute before the treatment.

PedsQL Health Care Satisfaction ScaleFirst measurement: After treatment

The PedsQL Health Care Satisfaction Scale was developed by J.W. Varni in 1999. Turkish adaptation of the scale was conducted by Ulus and Kublay in 2012. The scale consists of 25 items with 6 subheadings: emotional support, information, general satisfaction, communication, family involvement and technical skills. The scale is on a five-point scale and each item is rated on a scale of 0 to 4 and is evaluated as "Never satisfied (0)", "Sometimes satisfied (1)", "Most of the time satisfied (2)", "Almost always satisfied (3)" and "Always satisfied (4)". A high score indicates an increase in parental satisfaction.

Descriptive Characteristics Information FormFirst measurement: 30 minute before treatment

A descriptive characteristics information form for parents and children was prepared by the researchers in line with the literature and the data of both the experimental and control groups were collected before the intervention.

Visual Analog ScaleFirst measurement: 1 minute before treatment

Visual Analog Scale (VAS) was developed by Wong and Baker in 1988. Patients' pain levels are evaluated by scoring with facial expressions. It is used in children who have the ability to communicate and are conscious. The scale has 6 faces that are scored between 0 and 5. In scoring, the child chooses the face that best expresses him/her and "0" indicates no pain, "1" indicates a little pain, "2" indicates a little more pain, "3" indicates more pain, "4" indicates quite a lot of pain and "5" indicates the most severe pain level. One minute before the treatment, the child's pain is scored by VAS.

Physiological Parameter Monitoring FormFirst measurement: 1 minute before treatment

The descriptive characteristics form was based on a literature review by the investigator. Heart rate (min), oxygen saturation (SpO2%), blood pressure (mmHg) and respiratory rate (min) were measured 1 minute before treatment administration.

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Visual Analog ScaleSecond measurement: 1 minute after treatment

One minute after the treatment, the child's pain score was scored again

Physiological Parameter Monitoring FormSecond measurement: 1 minute after treatment

Heart rate (min), oxygen saturation (SpO2%), blood pressure (mmHg) and respiratory rate (min) were measured one minute after treatment administration.

Children's State Anxiety and Children's Fear ScaleSecond measurement: 1 minute after treatment

1 minute after the treatment, the child's anxiety and fear score was scored again.

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

Selcuk University

🇹🇷

Konya, Turkey

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