ClinicalTrials.Veeva

Menu

Efficacy of Art Intervention on Decreasing Pain and Anxiety During Intravenous Cannulation

U

University of Witten/Herdecke

Status

Completed

Conditions

Art
Children
Anxiety
Catheterization
Pain

Treatments

Other: Trace Image and Coloring for Kids-Book (TICK-B)

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

Details and patient eligibility

About

Peripheral Intravenous Cannulation (PIVC), one of the most common therapeutic procedures in medical care, can be difficult even for experienced medical practitioners. The pain of intravenous cannulation is considered the major limitation in pediatric clinical care. Reducing the pain of intravenous cannulation has been the motive for many investigations. Intervention methods used to reduce the distress related to painful procedures are widely recommended. The management of pain and anxiety is more essential because it may modify children's memory for procedural pain and the subsequent acceptance of later health care painful interventions. Distraction is the most studied psychological technique to relieve venipuncture-related pain and distress, with strong evidence supporting its efficacy in children.

Art therapy commonly used to reduce pain and anxiety of children's disease but was not used in reducing distress outcomes of painful procedures.

We used a collection of the image need for coloring and tracing called Trace Image and Coloring for Kids-Book (TICK-B).

The purpose of this study is to exam the effectiveness of TICK-B in decreasing pain and anxiety during cannulation.

Full description

Peripheral Intravenous Cannulation (PIVC), one of the most common therapeutic procedures in medical care, can be difficult even for experienced medical practitioners. The pain of intravenous cannulation is considered the major limitation in pediatric clinical care. Reducing the pain of intravenous cannulation has been the motive for many investigations. Intervention methods used to reduce the distress related to painful procedures are widely recommended. The management of pain and anxiety is more essential because it may modify children's memory for procedural pain and the subsequent acceptance of later health care painful interventions. Distraction is the most studied psychological technique to relieve venipuncture-related pain and distress, with strong evidence supporting its efficacy in children.

Art therapy commonly used to reduce pain and anxiety of children's disease but was not used in reducing distress outcomes of painful procedures.

We used a collection of the image need for coloring and tracing called Trace Image and Coloring for Kids-Book (TICK-B).

The purpose of this study is to exam the effectiveness of TICK-B in decreasing pain and anxiety during cannulation.

Enrollment

100 patients

Sex

All

Ages

6 to 12 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Pediatric patients 6-12 years old,
  • Pediatric who needed peripheral cannulation,

Exclusion criteria

  • Children with chronic conditions,
  • impairments physical,
  • Disabilities with communicating difficulties,
  • Those whose parent not participated,
  • Neurodevelopmental delayed, can't verbal speak, hearing or visual impairments,
  • Children with coma or drowsiness,
  • have to take analgesic medication for less than 6 hrs.
  • history of syncope.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Prevention

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Double Blind

100 participants in 2 patient groups

TICK-B group as Intervention group
Experimental group
Description:
Pediatric patients received TICK-B as a distraction in the TICK-B group Trace Image and Coloring for Kids-Book were conducted on the children undergoing the Cannulation procedure.
Treatment:
Other: Trace Image and Coloring for Kids-Book (TICK-B)
Standard care provided group as control group
No Intervention group
Description:
Pediatric patients received standard care (routine care) in the control group.

Trial contacts and locations

1

Loading...

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

Clinical trials

Find clinical trialsTrials by location
© Copyright 2026 Veeva Systems