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Immersive Care - Virtual Reality(VR) 360 Pediatric Surgery Preparation.

Not Applicable
Conditions
Surgery
Interventions
Device: VR 360 video surgery preparation
Other: Care as usual
Registration Number
NCT04658030
Lead Sponsor
Thomas More University of Applied Sciences
Brief Summary

Context: This study is part of the larger Immersive Care project which (in short) seeks the connection between technology and care by conducting feasibility studies with promising technological interventions tailored to care.

This is one of the case studies from the larger project titled: 360 ° video VR surgery preparation: feasibility, acceptability, tolerability and initial effectiveness of virtual reality for children in a Flemish hospital.

Domain: This scientific study will take place in 1 hospital on the pediatric ward. The target group consists of children between 6 and 12 years of age who will undergo an operation, the parents and the care providers involved.

Target:

1. Assess the acceptability, feasibility and tolerability of the 360 ° video VR surgery preparation.

2. Assess the effectiveness of the 360 ° video VR surgery preparation on preoperative procedural anxiety in children, comparing the intervention with care as usual (CAU \*).

* CAU in this study is a picture book which is a kind of animated video with text to explain what will happen on the day of the operation.

Detailed Description

Not available

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
UNKNOWN
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
80
Inclusion Criteria
  • Written informed consent must be obtained
  • Inpatient or outpatient in the study site (Heilig Hart Hospital Lier): each paediatric patient who will undergo surgery during the study period (01-12-2020 and 30-09- 2021).
  • Age range of ≥ 6 and ≤ 12
  • Normal or corrected-to-normal vision
  • Normal or corrected-to-normal hearing
Exclusion Criteria
  • Patient has a history of seizure disorders (e.g. epilepsy)
  • Physical impairment that preclude VR intervention (e.g. facial burns or wounds, contagious infectious disease, need for intensive care)
  • Non-Dutch/English/French speaker: Both the paediatric patient and his/her caregiver must be able to provide informed consent and assent
  • Previous enrolment in this study (during a previous hospital stay)

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
PARALLEL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
VR 360 video surgery preparationVR 360 video surgery preparationPreparing pediatric patients for surgery with a newly developed VR 360 degree video. Maximum 30 minutes, one time.
Care as usualCare as usualPreparing the children for surgery with the care as usual. A booklet that can be viewed by the children and parents at home.
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Patient satisfaction: Client Satisfaction Questionnaire (CSQ-8)Immediately after the intervention

Assessment of client satisfaction with the VR application with the Client Satisfaction Questionnaire (CSQ-8). The CSQ-8 consists of 8 items with four response options. Higher scores indicate higher satisfaction.

Change from baseline in staff attitude towards the interventionStaff: Measurement takes place in week 5 after the start of the study.

Unified theory of acceptance and use of technology tests the acceptance of the staff towards the intervention in this study.

Assess change in patient attitude towards the intervention with the Unified Theory of Acceptance and Use of Technology (UTAUT) questionnaire survey. The UTAUT questionnaire survey for end-users consists of 20 items with five response options ranging from "Totally disagree" to "Totally agree". The questionnaire survey consists of 7 subscales, for most of which higher scores indicate a more positive attitude towards the intervention.

Usability of the intervention: System Usability Scale (SUS)Immediately after the intervention.

Assessment of ease of use of the intervention with the System Usability Scale (SUS). The SUS is a 10 item questionnaire with five response options for respondents; from "strongly disagree" to "strongly agree". A higher SUS score indicates better usability.

Change from baseline in tolerability (Do participants experience symptoms of simulator sickness?)Immediately after the intervention

Assessment of physical side effects after exposure to VR by the Pediatric Simulator Sickness Questionnaire (Peds SSQ).

The Peds SSQ contains queries that probe 4 symptom categories: (1) eye strain (queries 1-4); (2) head and neck discomfort (queries 5 and 6); (3) sleepiness (solipsism) or fatigue (queries 7 and 8); and dizziness or nausea (visually induced motion sickness, queries 9-13). The scale that is used is a likert scale (with additional faces) ranging from 0 to 6 per query (0 = no of the above "complaints"; 6 = a lot of the above "complaints".

Intervention adherenceImmediately after the intervention

Measure intervention adherence by registering the number of fully completed sessions.

Procedure timeImmediately after the intervention

The procedure time of intervention in minutes

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Preliminary effectiveness (change in anxiety between timepoints) (Intervention and control)Measurement 1: Immediately after signing the informed consent, day 1 of study. Measurement 2: Immediately after the intervention, day 1 of study. Measurement 3: Just before surgery, day 4 of study

Measuring procedural anxiety (with a Visual Analogue Scale) (1.Before intervention/control, 2. just after intervention/control and 3.just before surgery)

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

Heilig Hart Ziekenhuis Lier

🇧🇪

Lier, Vlaanderen, Belgium

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