MedPath

Robots to Reduce Pain During IV Placement

Not Applicable
Completed
Conditions
Anxiety
Pain
Interventions
Behavioral: Coping Robot
Behavioral: Non-coping Robot
Registration Number
NCT02840942
Lead Sponsor
Children's Hospital Los Angeles
Brief Summary

Peripheral intravenous catheters (IVs) are utilized in the majority of hospitalized children. The placement of IVs requires significant staff time, contributes to health care costs, and causes pain and distress in the patients receiving them. Techniques currently used at Children's Hospital Los Angeles (CHLA) to reduce children's anxiety and increase success of IV placement center depends on members of the Child Life Department distracting patients during insertion. Recent literature has suggested that humanoid robots can be a powerful form of distraction and lead to decreased pain during painful procedures in children. Work done by the University of Southern California (USC) Interaction Lab has shown that socially assistive robots can use techniques more complex than pure distraction to lead to a human-robot interaction that is perceived as more positive by the human. The investigators propose a project pairing children receiving an IV with either a (1) Child Life staff member only (2) pure distraction robot + Child Life or (3) an robot teaching coping skills + Child Life with a goal of reduced pain. Pain will be measured by participant self-report, family member perceived pain, parasympathetic activation, and pain behaviors as measured by video.

Detailed Description

At USC University Park, computer science collaborators have programmed the robot to speak the script which will be used for interaction with participants (see additional supporting documents).

At CHLA, patients arriving to the radiology suite for IV placement prior to MRI and utilizing Child Life Services will be approached and consented for inclusion. No participant will receive a IV purely for the purpose of the study; only participants already ordered to receive IV by the medical team will be included. After consent participants will be randomized in blocks using a random-condition generating document to one of three test conditions: (1) control, with the usual distraction services provided by one of the hospital's child life specialists (2) usual child life + non-coping robot or (2) usual child life + coping robot.

Prior to the procedure participant's parent (or legal guardian) will complete a short survey related to pain with previous IV insertions, anxiety related to procedures, and attitudes toward robots. Participant's parent/guardian will also complete a validated measure of child temperament. Participants will complete a baseline measure of their temperament. Participants will then rate current level of pain using the Wong-Baker FACES scale. Participant's anxiety level will be assessed using the Children's Fear Scale. Participant's baseline heart rate and blood pressure is recorded.

The IV placement itself will be video recorded for all conditions. Independent assessors not aware of the research aims will review the tape to score measures of the strength of robot-child interaction and pain behaviors. One research team member will record the number of attempts needed to place the IV. A trained research team member will be responsible for operating the robot if randomized to that condition.

The robot used is the MAKI - an open-source 3D printable robot designed by Hello Robo Inc. The company has not provided any funding to this project. During the interaction the robot will speak in a child-like, gender neutral voice. It will ask short questions of participants and have pre-recorded response options (see MAKI script in supporting documents). Participants will interact with either child life or the robot by touching tablets. This is a minimum risk study, similar to the risk involved in watching a video on a screen. The robot is small and only moves its facial features, participants are not touching it.

Pre- and post-intervention participants will repeat the FACES and Fear Scales. The participant and parent/guardian will then be given a short post-survey regarding thoughts on the utility of the interaction and the amount of the participant's pain. Heart rate will be monitored continuously throughout the interaction. Videos will be evaluated using the modified Yale Preoperative Anxiety Index and The Child-Adult Medical Procedure Interaction Scale-Short Form (CAMPIS-SF).

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
COMPLETED
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
34
Inclusion Criteria
  • Speaks English or Spanish
  • Age limits
  • would be getting IV and child life regardless of participation in study
Exclusion Criteria
  • severe developmental delay (parent assessment)
  • afraid of robots

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
PARALLEL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
Coping RobotCoping RobotRobot will play coping game with children. Robot will speak and child will respond by touching tablet. Child life still present.
Non-coping RobotNon-coping RobotRobot will play distraction only game, in addition to Child Life and routine cares
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Change in Pain Scale Score from baseline to post-interventionthrough study completion, an average of 1 hour

Using Wong-baker faces pain scale

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
heart ratethrough study completion, an average of 1 hour

using pulse oximeter

IV placement attemptsthrough study completion, an average of 1 hour

record raw number of attempts to compare average between arms

Change in Anxiety Scale Score from baseline to post-interventionthrough study completion, an average of 1 hour

using fear faces scale

CAMPIS scoreDay 1

on video review

mYPAS scoreDay 1

on video review

Patient/Child satisfaction with robot interactionDay 1

by survey

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

Children's Hospital Los Angeles

🇺🇸

Los Angeles, California, United States

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