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Virtual Reality to Reduce Anxiety and Pain During Suturing Procedure

T

Tuen Mun Hospital

Status

Completed

Conditions

Suture

Treatments

Device: Virtual reality

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT05796076
NTWC/REC/22003

Details and patient eligibility

About

Background: In emergency departments, suturing is a common procedure but often causes anxiety and pain. Virtual reality (VR) intervention has been reported as a relaxing measure.

Objective: The study aims to examine the effects of VR intervention on anxiety, pain, physiological parameters, local anaesthesia requirements and satisfaction in Chinese adult patients undergoing wound closure in emergency departments in Hong Kong

Hypothesis:VR can alleviate anxiety and pain experienced by Chinese adult patients undergoing wound-closure procedures, the intervention can decrease extra local anesthesia requirements and physiological parameters during the procedures, and the intervention can significantly increase satisfaction during wound-closure procedures.

Full description

Suturing is one of the most common procedure in the emergency department, however, it often provokes anxiety and pain. 1-2 Failure to manage patients' anxiety and pain during wound closure can cause difficulties for health care providers to complete the procedures and reduce the success rates. 3 Experience of anxiety and pain may also increase the need for medication, reduce patients' satisfaction rate and cause negative physiological parameters such as increased blood pressure and heart rate. 4-5.

Traditionally, nonpharmacological intervention such as listening to music, chatting, and guided imagery is applied to reduce patient's anxiety and pain. However these measures fail to provide patients with significant distraction because patients would inevitably see the procedure that causes considerable distress during the procedure. Thus, the development of further strategies to provide a significant distraction to alleviate patients' anxiety and pain during suturing is warranted.

With advanced technologies, virtual reality (VR) provides significant distraction. Clinical trials indicate that use of VR achieved a statistically significant decrease in anxiety and pain in different operations such as hand 6, lipoma incision 7, Gynecology 8, and debridement 9. However, only a handful of studies conducted among adult patient with ambulatory laceration repairing examined the effectiveness of VR in anxiety and pain. To the best of our knowledge, no study specifically focus on the effects of VR on anxiety and pain in Chinese adult patients undergoing an awake suture in emergency room in Hong Kong. Eighty participants will be assigned to the experimental group or to the control group by randomization.

After written informed consent will be obtained from patients, the baseline data (T0) will be obtained from the participants including sociodemographic, anxiety, blood pressure, and pulse rate. Subsequently, randomization is conducted. Throughout the procedure (T1), the additional medication requirements and physiological parameters will be recorded. The anxiety, pain and satisfaction and physiological parameters will also be recorded after the procedure. Data will be analyzed using IBM SPSS 23.0. Descriptive statistics, including frequency, percentage, mean and standard deviation will be used to describe the data. Chi-square tests compare categorical variables, and independent t-tests compare continuous variables. Generalized Estimation Equation will be used to examine the effectiveness of the VR intervention versus the control group will be evaluated by comparing the study outcomes. Two-tailed tests will be used with a significant level of 0.05.

Enrollment

80 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18 to 65 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  1. Conscious, oriented
  2. Adult patient (age between 18 and 65 years) with scheduled to receive an awake minor suture
  3. Ability to communicate in Chinese, and read and write Chinese language
  4. Hemodynamic stability as evidenced by blood pressure between 90 to 140 mmHg systolic and 60 to 90 mmHg diastolic before the procedure

Exclusion criteria

  1. Have visual, hearing or cognitive impairment
  2. History of senile dementia, seizure disorder, motion sickness, psychiatric disorders as indicated in medical record
  3. Have injury or infection above the neck
  4. Known to be on contact precaution

Trial design

Primary purpose

Health Services Research

Allocation

N/A

Interventional model

Single Group Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

80 participants in 1 patient group

Control group
Other group
Description:
Participants in the control group will be received standard care
Treatment:
Device: Virtual reality

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Jan Huang, Degree

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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