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Comparison of Different Methods for Reducing Pain in Heel Blood in Newborns

K

Kutahya Health Sciences University

Status

Completed

Conditions

Pain

Treatments

Other: swaddling and holding
Other: skin to skin contact
Other: breastfeeding

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT05797532
Nursing12345

Details and patient eligibility

About

Newborns are exposed to painful invasive procedures from the first hours of their lives. It is stated that the functional and anatomical structure of the neural pathways of newborns with many systems immature develops well enough to feel pain and they have the ability to remember after experiencing pain. Physiological symptoms (increase in heart rate and blood pressure, increase in oxygen saturation, etc.) as a result of painful procedures (vascular or heel lance collection, venous or arterial catheterization, subcutaneous and intramuscular injection, chest tube insertion, intubation, aspiration, etc.) applied for diagnosis and treatment in newborns. falling), crying behavior and metabolic problems. In conclusion, the energy resources required for the growth and development of newborns are used to cope with pain, and it is reported that repetitive painful procedures increase mortality and morbidity in newborns.

Heel lance, which is applied to all newborns within the scope of the newborn screening program, is one of the painful invasive procedures for newborns. Heel lance should be taken as capillaries in the first 48 hours after feeding or until the first week of life of newborns. In the literature, non-pharmacological methods applied to reduce the severity of pain felt by newborns during heel lance, which also causes tissue integrity deterioration; It has been observed that studies examining the effects of breast milk, swaddling, holding, breastfeeding, music, oral sucrose, non-nutritive sucking, skin-to-skin contact (SSC) and positioning. SSC, breastfeeding and swaddling + holding methods are among the methods that can be easily used by mothers and nurses. Nurses working in the maternity ward where heel lance sampling is performed in the hospital have a key role in reducing the pain level of newborns by collaborating with the families of the babies.

Full description

This study was conducted to compare three different methods (breastfeeding, skin-to-skin contact, swaddling + holding) in reducing the pain felt during routine heel lance from term newborns within the scope of the National "Newborn Screening Program" of the Ministry of Health.

Hypotheses; H1: Breastfeeding method is more effective than skin-to-skin contact and swaddling + holding methods in reducing pain due to heel lance in newborns.

H2: Skin-to-skin contact method is more effective than breastfeeding and swaddling + holding methods in reducing pain due to heel lance collection in newborns.

H3: Swaddling + holding method is more effective than breastfeeding and skin-to-skin contact methods in reducing the pain associated with heel lance collection in newborns.

Statistical power analysis was performed at the end of the study in line with the data collected from a total of 90 newborns, 30 of whom were in each study group. The power of the study was found to be 0.81 - 0.99 at the alpha = 0.05 significance level, and the effect size was between 0.02 and 0.68.

Enrollment

90 patients

Sex

All

Ages

24 to 36 hours old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

Newborns (0-28days);

  • Being born at term (38 - 42 weeks)
  • Stable vital signs
  • Having completed the first 24 hours of life and being fed
  • Heel blood procedure will be applied for the Ministry of Health screening.
  • Not being breastfed 30 minutes before the procedure
  • No previous invasive intervention other than vitamin K and hepatitis B vaccine.
  • 1st and 5th minute Apgar score ≥7
  • Parents have given written consent.

Exclusion criteria

Newborns (0-28days);

  • Unstable vital signs
  • Being bottle-fed or formula-fed
  • Having a neurological diagnosis
  • Prior exposure to another invasive procedure other than vitamin K and hepatitis B vaccine.
  • Maternal use of opioids,
  • Not being born at term.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Health Services Research

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

90 participants in 3 patient groups

breastfeeding
Active Comparator group
Description:
The mother was allowed to sit comfortably in the patient's room, the pulse oximeter probe was attached to the left foot of the newborn, and the newborn, who was placed on the mother's lap, was breastfeeding for 5 minutes before the heel lance, and breastfeeding was continued during the procedure.
Treatment:
Other: breastfeeding
skin to skin contact
Active Comparator group
Description:
The newborn's clothes were removed so that only the diaper and baby hat were left, and a pulse oximeter probe was attached to his left foot. The newborn was placed on the mother's bare chest between her two breasts, facing the mother's face, with her head up, in the prone position, covered with a baby blanket, and skin-to-skin contact was made between the mother and the newborn for at least 5 minutes before starting the heel lance procedure.
Treatment:
Other: skin to skin contact
swaddling and holding
Active Comparator group
Description:
A pulse oximeter probe was attached to the newborn's left foot, and the legs were in flexion and abduction position, wrapped with a square cloth blanket and placed on his mother's lap. It was ensured that the newborn was held in the mother's lap with his head up and feet down for 5 minutes before heel lance.
Treatment:
Other: swaddling and holding

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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