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Evaluating the Effect of the Use of Virtual Reality Headset in School Vaccinations

K

Karadeniz Technical University

Status

Completed

Conditions

Anxiety and Fear

Treatments

Other: Use of virtual reality glasses during vaccination applications in children

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT04755998
İlknur KAHRİMAN

Details and patient eligibility

About

This study was conducted with a randomized controlled experimental design to determine the effect of virtual reality headset on children's fear and anxiety during vaccinations.

Research Hypotheses:

Hypothesis 0a (H0a): There is no difference in fear scores between the experimental group in which virtual reality glasses were used during vaccination administration and the control group.

Hypothesis 1a (H1a): There is a difference in fear scores between the experimental group in which virtual reality glasses were used during vaccination administration and the control group.

Hypothesis 0b (H0b): There is no difference in anxiety scores between the experimental group in which virtual reality glasses were used during vaccination administration and the control group.

Hypothesis 1b (H1b): There is a difference in anxiety scores experienced between the experimental group in which virtual reality glasses were used during vaccination administration and the control group.

Full description

Interventions made for protecting health or curing diseases, significantly affect children's psychological state and social adaptation. Being one of these interventions, vaccination may cause fear and anxiety in children. This fear and anxiety may affect children's future treatment and care experiences and result in fright and avoidance in them. Thus, it is important to try and reduce biological stress and to cope with psychosocial stress. One of the methods which can be used for this purpose is virtual reality headset used as a distraction method. This study was conducted with a randomized controlled experimental design to determine the effect of virtual reality headset on children's fear and anxiety during vaccinations. The population of the study consisted of first grade students attending primary schools in the city center of Ordu. The study was completed with 84 students in the experimental group and 85 students in the control group. With the sample number obtained as a result of the study, the test power was found to be 89.8% when the alpha error was 0.05 and the effect size was kept at 0.5. The data were collected using the Child and Parent Introductory Information Form, Children's Fear Scale, and Children's Anxiety Scale-State Scale.

Enrollment

169 patients

Sex

All

Ages

72 to 84 months old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Parental consent
  • Student's willingness to participate in the research
  • The student does not have a mental or neurological disability
  • Not being able to communicate
  • The student does not have a chronic illness
  • The student does not have an illness that causes acute or chronic pain
  • The student has not used any analgesic medication in the last 24 hours.

Exclusion criteria

  • Lack of parental consent
  • Student's unwillingness to participate in the research
  • The student has a mental or neurological disability
  • The student has a communication disability
  • The student has a chronic illness
  • The student has an illness that causes acute or chronic pain
  • The student's use of medication that will have an analgesic effect in the last 24 hours.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Prevention

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Single Blind

169 participants in 2 patient groups

Experimental Group
Experimental group
Description:
The Experimental Group watched cartoons with virtual reality glasses during vaccination applications.
Treatment:
Other: Use of virtual reality glasses during vaccination applications in children
Control Group
No Intervention group
Description:
Pre-test and post-tests were applied to the non-intervention group

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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