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Anxiety is when children feel scared, worried, or nervous before or during anesthesia induction. This can happen because they don't know what's happening, are scared of the hospital or medical equipment, or are worried about being separated from their parents.
When parents are present, they can:
When parents are not present, children may feel:
Full description
Induction of pediatric anesthesia represents a highly stressful event for children, often resulting in preoperative anxiety that can impair the child's perioperative experience and result in adverse postoperative outcomes. It has been proposed that parental presence during induction of anesthesia Preoperative anxiety is linked to postoperative maladaptive behaviors, such as pain following surgery, insomnia, conflicts between the child and his parent, separation anxiety, increased urinary frequency during the night, reduced appetite, lack of interest, agitation, and alienation.may be a non-pharmacologic intervention to reduce children's anxiety. In patients with extreme anxiety, unfavorable postoperative behaviors after anesthesia induction are likely to result in long-term issues, which adversely affect the process of recovery, and also develop a feeling of inadequate care. Parental presence at anesthesia induction is the interaction that takes place in the induction room during the course of anesthesia induction between the child, parent, anesthesiologist, and perioperative nurses.
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75 participants in 2 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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