Pain Clinical Trial
Official title:
Evaluation of a Biofeedback Tool to Minimize Procedural Pain and Anxiety in Children
Belly breathing is a popular relaxation technique used to reduce anxiety and pain in
children during medical procedures. The investigators have developed a biofeedback game that
will help teach children how to belly breathe in an interactive way. Existing studies have
shown that biofeedback tools are effective ways to teach relaxation techniques to children.
The purpose of this study is to evaluate 1) whether this new biofeedback tool is a more a
effective and engaging way to teach belly breathing to children and 2) whether the
application is more effective in reducing procedural pain and anxiety compared to standard
of care, self-directed belly breathing alone or self-directed belly-breathing combined with
visual distraction. The investigators hypothesize that:
1. The smartphone-based biofeedback game for belly breathing will reduce self-reported
procedural anxiety and pain in children during a blood collection procedure compared
to:
1. standard of care
2. belly breathing + standard care procedures
3. belly breathing with visual components of the application with no coaching or
biofeedback distraction.
2. The smartphone-based biofeedback game will increase compliance with belly breathing
compared to self-directed breathing.
3. Belly breathing with smartphone-based biofeedback game will be more engaging compared
to self-directed belly breathing.
Status | Not yet recruiting |
Enrollment | 300 |
Est. completion date | December 2016 |
Est. primary completion date | December 2016 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | Accepts Healthy Volunteers |
Gender | Both |
Age group | 5 Years to 17 Years |
Eligibility |
Inclusion Criteria: - Able to understand basic spoken and written English Exclusion Criteria: No participants will be excluded from the study. However, data may be excluded during post-study analysis if a child: - suffers from a severe cardiovascular or respiratory condition that could significantly affect heart rate or respiratory rate - is taking medication that could significantly affect heart rate or respiratory rate - is using a local anesthetic during the blood collection procedure |
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Prevention
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
Canada | British Columbia Children's Hospital | Vancouver | British Columbia |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
British Columbia Children's Hospital |
Canada,
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* Note: There are 14 references in all — Click here to view all references
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Primary | Self-reported experienced pain | Pain will be assessed using the Color Analog Scale (CAS), which is a tool that contains a gradation of colour and width on a piece of plastic, ranging from white and narrow ('no pain') to wide and red ('the most pain') to represent different levels of pain intensity. The child will be instructed to slide a marker along the scale to indicate the colour and width that represents her/his pain and an evaluator then reads and records the corresponding numeral value scored from 0 to 10 in increments of 0.25 on the reverse side of the scale. The slider is originally positioned in the middle of scale. The CAS has been shown to be appropriate for children ages 5 to 18. | Immediately following blood collection, on average within one minute of needle removal | No |
Primary | Change in self-reported preprocedural anxiety | Preprocedural state anxiety will be assessed using the Visual Analogue Scale of Anxiety (VAS-A), which consists of a 100 mm horizontal line with two end points labelled "no anxiety or fear" and "worst possible anxiety or fear." Anxiety will be measured at two time points, prior to and following intervention. The scale will be scored from 1 to 100 (1mm=1/100) and will be presented in a way that the child cannot see his/her previous ratings. | Prior to blood collection, on average within one minute of consent form completion and five minutes after initial VAS-A score is recorded | No |
Primary | Change in self-reported expected pain | Pain will be assessed twice prior to blood collection using the CAS: once before the intervention and once after the intervention or approximately five minutes after the first assessment for the non-intervention standard of care group. | Prior to blood collection, on average within one minute of consent form completion and five minutes after initial CAS score is recorded | No |
Secondary | Belly breathing compliance | A pulse oximeter will be used to collect a photoplethysmography (PPG) signal, which measures belly breathing compliance through heart rate monitoring. | During entire blood collection procedure, beginning within ten seconds of sitting in the collection chair and ending within ten seconds of needle removal | No |
Secondary | Belly breathing engagement | A questionnaire with likert-type questions scored on a scale of 1 to 5 (1=strongly disagree; 5=strongly agree) was developed for this study to measure engagement with belly breathing with the application compared to belly breathing without the application. | Immediately following blood collection; on average the questionnaire will be administered within one minute of needle removal | No |
Secondary | Self-reported experienced anxiety | Procedural state anxiety will be assessed using the VAS-A. The child will be asked to rate the anxiety he/she experienced while he/she was having his/her blood drawn. | Following blood collection, on average within one minute of needle removal | No |
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