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Exploring Virtual Reality in Clinical Care - Impacts on Patient Distress, Parental Anxiety and Nurse Satisfaction

Virginia Commonwealth University (VCU) logo

Virginia Commonwealth University (VCU)

Status

Completed

Conditions

Anxiety

Treatments

Other: Virtual Reality
Behavioral: Survey Responses/Parent Caregivers
Behavioral: Survey Responses/Nurses

Study type

Observational

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT07280910
HM20032312

Details and patient eligibility

About

Prior experience with virtual reality (VR) in clinical care has demonstrated its potential to reduce patient anxiety and distress, particularly in pediatric settings. VR has been shown to effectively decrease preoperative anxiety in children undergoing various medical procedures, including IV catheter replacement, blood draws, and improve their compliance with anesthesia and overall procedural experiences. Limited evidence exists regarding the impact of VR on the broader care environment, including parental anxiety and nursing satisfaction in pediatric settings.

Full description

This retrospective study analyzes de-identified data from a nine-month quality improvement initiative to evaluate the impact of a custom VR intervention on pediatric preoperative anxiety, parental anxiety, and nurse satisfaction in a real clinical setting. The findings offer preliminary, practice-relevant evidence that VR can be a feasible, acceptable, and clinically meaningful non-pharmacologic tool in pediatric preoperative care, and they provide actionable insights to guide future implementation efforts and rigorous trials aimed at improving the hospital experience for children, families, and providers.

Enrollment

168 patients

Sex

All

Ages

6+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion and exclusion criteria

Pediatric Subjects

Inclusion Criteria:

  • pediatric patients who received VR intervention as part of the original QI initiative.
  • pediatric patients who were eligible and received VR during the QI initiative aged 6-15 years.

Exclusion Criteria:

  • Patients with developmental delays, head injuries, or seizures were excluded from the study.
  • Only those pediatric patients who met the inclusion criteria and did not exhibit the specified exclusion conditions were included. Data protection and de-identification procedures were rigorously applied throughout the study

Caregivers/Parents

Inclusion Criteria:

- pediatric patients who were eligible and received VR during the QI initiative, aged 6-15 years

Exclusion Criteria:

- N/A

Nurses

Inclusion Criteria:

  • nurses of pediatric patients who were eligible and received VR during the QI initiative, aged 6-15 years

Exclusion Criteria:

  • N/A

Trial design

168 participants in 3 patient groups

Pediatric Patients
Description:
Pediatric patients receiving VR interventions (6-15 years)
Treatment:
Other: Virtual Reality
Parent Caregivers
Description:
Parents of Pediatric patients receiving VR interventions (6-15 years)
Treatment:
Behavioral: Survey Responses/Parent Caregivers
Nurses
Description:
The nursing staff are involved in the care process of the Pediatric patients receiving VR interventions (6-15 years)
Treatment:
Behavioral: Survey Responses/Nurses

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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