Pediatric Pain Clinical Trial
Official title:
Applying a Small Procedure Prior to Injection/Vaccination Reduces Pain Experiences in Child Patients
Pain is common among children. Given that children are not as mature and independent in assessing or treating their pain as adults, they are a relatively vulnerable group in terms of pain management and are in need of additional attention. However, there is still insufficient recognition and treatment of pain in children. Taken the procedure of injection/vaccination in children as an example, child patients usually wait for their turn to take the injection from the nurse/doctor, during which anxiety and fear of pain develop. As children are less able to manage their pain than adults, the fear they develop during the waiting time, together with the pain they actually felt after the treatment, can bring negative experiences to them. In this proposed project, the investigators aim to apply a minor procedure prior to a treatment that induces pain (e.g., injection / vaccination) to help managing pediatric pain.
In a series of experiments, Yeung and colleagues found that participants who merely possessed an object framed as having a particular function or benefit experienced an elevation of their self-efficacy in a corresponding domain. For example, participants who possessed reading materials regarded themselves as more knowledgeable. This is because people are inclined to associate themselves with the objects they possess, whose attributes are thus incorporated as part of the self. This mere possession effect also extends to the area of placebo analgesia. Previous placebo analgesic research typically showed pain reduction after using a placebo analgesic. However, a newly emerged line of research demonstrated that sometimes, people who were merely given possession of a placebo analgesic, without using it, already reported better pain outcomes. This is presumably attributable to the mere possession of the object that enables them to believe they have already received the intended benefit of using it. In Yeung, Geers, and Colloca's study, they found that merely possessing a placebo analgesic yielded placebo analgesia similar to a situation where a placebo analgesic was actually used. The researchers claimed that this observed possession effect was due to the positive expectancy derived from owning a placebo analgesic, i.e., participants expected that the owned placebo analgesic could bring benefits to them. The finding of the above-mentioned possession-based placebo analgesic effect is encouraging as it can inform healthcare practitioners and physicians about the possibility of tailoring, forming, or optimizing their medical intervention strategies to enhance positive pain outcomes and novel pain management. For instance, practitioners, clinicians, and dentists could consider tailoring their therapeutic interaction and treatment by incorporating an appropriate possession procedure to reduce undesired negative pain outcomes. In this proposed project, the investigators attempt to apply a possession procedure to child patients prior to their treatment that would induce pain. The investigators hypothesize that acquiring the ownership of a first-aid bandage would contribute to pain alleviation by enhancing children's self-efficacy to cope with pain. The investigators expect that children who receive a first-aid bandage prior to injection would report a lower level of estimated pain (before injection) and lower real-time pain intensity and severity (during injection) than children who do not receive the first-aid bandage prior to the injection. ;
Status | Clinical Trial | Phase | |
---|---|---|---|
Completed |
NCT01813669 -
Integrative Coping Group for Children
|
N/A | |
Recruiting |
NCT05902234 -
Emotional Bodymaps in Pediatric Pain Patients and Their Parents.
|
||
Completed |
NCT03699007 -
GET Living: Graded Exposure Treatment for Children and Adolescents With Chronic Pain
|
N/A | |
Completed |
NCT00884780 -
Development of a New Electronic Measure of Pediatric Pain: A Pilot Study
|
N/A |