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This project will use a randomized controlled trial to test the effect of using Virtual Reality on pain, anxiety, patients' comfort, and satisfaction during colonoscopy. Patients will use a virtual reality head-mounted display and choose a visualized VR content to watch during colonoscopy. Colonoscopy will be initiated without standard sedatives and narcotics and using virtual reality distraction for as long as the patient would like (for a maximum of 20 minutes). Participants could opt out and/or request standard medications for pain at any time before or during the procedure.
Full description
This project aims to investigate the clinical effectiveness and implementation potential of using VR during colonoscopy using a hybrid type 1 effectiveness-implementation design through 2 work packages. The first work package will investigate the effect of VR on pain, anxiety, patients' comfort, and satisfaction during colonoscopy using a multicenter parallel randomized controlled, open-label trial. It will also be a qualitative interview to explore the healthcare professionals' and patients' experiences with using VR during colonoscopy.
The second work package will evaluate the implementation process using mix method to understand why the intervention is (or is not) more effective than usual care, whether high intervention fidelity is achieved, what barriers and facilitators there are, how these may translate into real-world implementation, and what modifications can be made to maximize implementation success. This will be achieved using quantitative and qualitative approaches with a focus on the process evaluation around the RE-AIM framework (Reach, Effectiveness, Adoption, Implementation, and Maintenance). Quantitative (e.g., quantitative analysis of patient participation rate and reasons for refusal assessment or ineligibility) and qualitative (e.g., qualitative interview of facilitators/barriers to implementing VR) data analyses will be combined to conclude the reach, adoption, implementation, and maintenance of the intervention.
The specific aims of the project will be pursued through 2 work packages and include:
Intervention effectiveness work package Study I: To investigate the effect of VR on pain, anxiety, patients' comfort, and satisfaction during colonoscopy.
Study II: To explore the healthcare professionals' and patients' experiences with using VR during colonoscopy.
Implementation work package
Qualitative part:
Quantitative part:
Participants will be recruited from adult patients referred to the two outpatient Endoscopy Units. Patients who meet the inclusion criteria and give written consent will be consecutively enrolled in the trial. These patients will be randomly allocated to an experimental group (using VR), or a control group (routine care). Outcomes will be measured immediately before, after, and/or during the procedure.
Some patients in the intervention group and healthcare professionals will be asked to participate in a qualitative interview to share their experiences of using VR under colonoscopy and to evaluate the implementation process.
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50 participants in 2 patient groups
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Hanne Konradsen, PhD; Mahdi Shamali, PhD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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