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The Effect of Educational Animation on Anxiety and Fear in Children With Tympanostomy Tube Placement in Pediatric Surgery: A Randomized Controlled Trial

B

Bartın Unıversity

Status

Enrolling

Conditions

Pediatric Surgical Patients

Treatments

Other: Control-Standard Care
Other: Educational animation about the process of ear tube surgery

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT06912243
2024-SBB-0907

Details and patient eligibility

About

The study was planned as a randomized controlled experimental research to determine the effect of educational video screening on anxiety and fear in children. All children between the ages of 6-10 years old who underwent ear tube surgery will be included. Children will be randomly assigned to two groups (training video group, control group-standard care). In the training video group, a nurse will explain the process of ear tube surgery to the children with an educational video. The scenario of this educational animation will include information about the preoperative fears of a child who will undergo ear tube surgery, the structure of the ear, what they are most curious about, what the ear tube is, what will happen during and after surgery. In the control-standard care group, the standard information given to all children who had ear tube surgery in the relevant service will be given to the children in the control group. Data will be collected with the Sociodemographic Questionnaire, Child Anxiety Scale-Condition Child Fear Scale before and after surgery.

Full description

When a child becomes ill and undergoes surgery, it can be an event that increases anxiety and fear for both the child and the parents. Parents may experience significant decision conflicts when making decisions about their child's elective surgical treatment, such as ear tube surgery. Children encounter many situations in the hospital that cause anxiety and fear. Especially if there is a surgical intervention plan in the treatment plan of the disease, psychological problems may arise in the child and family members. During the preoperative period, children can be quite stressed. Anxiety-inducing conditions include feeling restless due to the operation, fear of loneliness, feeling of foreignness, fear of pain after surgery, concern about disruption of the integrity of the body and frequent use of medical terms. Reducing anxiety before surgery has positive results in the recovery of the sick child and the parent after surgery. Methods such as preanesthetic drugs, distractions, the presence of the parent with the patient before anesthesia, preoperative training and psychological preparation of both the child and the family for surgery are used to reduce preoperative anxiety.

In the study examining the content of social media posts about ear tubes in children on popular social media platforms Instagram and Facebook, it was determined that most of the posts were made by parents/caregivers in the perioperative period and the rate of educational posts was low. With the increasing importance of patient/family-centered participation in the decision-making process in healthcare services, standardizing the content and increasing the usability of educational materials for surgical procedures commonly performed in children such as ear tube placement should be a priority. Since there are no standardized guidelines on how to write online patient education materials, online patient education materials vary in quality and readability.

This study may provide important information about the ear tube surgery procedure by helping children to focus their attention on positive things rather than stressful events with video and musical interventions, which are both economical and easy to use. To the best of our knowledge, there is no study in the literature examining the effect of video screening on anxiety and fear in children undergoing ear tube surgery. Therefore, this randomized controlled trial was planned to determine the effect of educational video screening on anxiety and fear in children.

Enrollment

60 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

6 to 10 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Being between 6-10 years old
  • Having ear tube surgery
  • Signing the informed consent form by the patient's legal guardian

Exclusion criteria

  • Previous surgical operation of the child
  • The child has had a cleft palate or lip operation before
  • Conditions that may prevent communication with parents (e.g. language problem)

Trial design

Primary purpose

Supportive Care

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Triple Blind

60 participants in 2 patient groups

Educational animation about the process of ear tube surgery
Experimental group
Description:
A nurse will explain the process of ear tube surgery to children in an educational video. This educational video scenario includes information about a child's fears before surgery, the structure of the ear, what they are most curious about, what an ear tube is, what happens during and after surgery. The educational video will be made by a person specialized in computer technologies. Artificial intelligence will be used in the vocalization of the educational video. Expert opinion will be taken for the instructional video. The duration of the educational video is planned to be in the range of 3-4 minutes in total.
Treatment:
Other: Educational animation about the process of ear tube surgery
Control-Standard Maintenance
Other group
Description:
Children in the control group will be given the standard information given to all children who had ear tube surgery in the relevant ward.
Treatment:
Other: Control-Standard Care

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Aylin Kurt

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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