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Preoperative Anxiety clinical trials

View clinical trials related to Preoperative Anxiety.

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NCT ID: NCT05887856 Enrolling by invitation - Anxiety Clinical Trials

Reduction of Pre-operative Anxiety Using a Specially Designed Educational Program for Breast Cancer Patients Undergoing Surgery: A Randomized Controlled Trial

PAUSDE
Start date: June 1, 2023
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This study aims to find out that if a specially designed educational program can help in reduction of pre-operative anxiety in breast cancer patients undergoing surgery as a part of their treatment.

NCT ID: NCT05401539 Enrolling by invitation - Clinical trials for Preoperative Anxiety

Effect of Virtual Tour of the Operating Theater on Fear and Anxiety of Preoperative Children

Start date: June 1, 2022
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Experiences such as hospitalization, medical or surgical procedures are stressful, complex and threatening, especially for children and their families. Among the first crisis symptoms that children are faced with are illness, hospitalization and surgery anxiety. There is a direct relationship between the fear and anxiety experienced by children and their parents during the pre-operative processes. Therefore, ensuring not only the psychological but also physiological preparation of both the children and their parents before the surgery is of great importance. In the hospital, applying distraction methods appropriate for the age period of children and conveying procedural information to them simultaneously are difficult and challenging. In such situations, in clinical settings, virtual reality technology can be used at any time and place without requiring extra workforce to eliminate or reduce children's fear and anxiety. Virtual reality applications, as a distracting therapeutic method, are a fun, calming, safe, accessible, effective and acceptable intervention that can be used for the management of acute pain, fear and anxiety in pediatric patients. Such applications can affect children visually, aurally and contextually. Because they are different from common distraction methods used by children such as reading books, playing with toys, watching television or movies, playing a two-dimensional video game or game console. Virtual reality (VR) is used to distract children's attention to reduce fear and anxiety before surgery. A VR tour of the operating theater can provide a realistic experience for children. The aim in this study was to investigate the effect of an actual operating theater tour which is watched by children aged 6-12 years wearing a 3D virtual headset on their fear and anxiety.