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The study was conducted to determine the effect of white noise and pacifier applications on pain and crying time during painful interventions in newborns who underwent surgery
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Newborns most often experience painful procedures such as heel blood collection and peripheral venous catheter placement in the neonatal intensive care unit. Exposure to pain early in life has even been shown to increase the risk of developing problems (chronic pain, anxiety, and depressive disorders) in adulthood. This result implies that newborn or child pain should be adequately managed. Thus, pain in newborns or children should be prevented before it occurs, and if it cannot be prevented, it should be determined in the early period and the pain should be alleviated. Managing this pain in newborns should be one of the primary duties of newborn nurses. The first and most important determinant in relieving pain is determining the severity of pain, and non-pharmacological or pharmacological methods should be preferred according to the severity of the pain. Many non-pharmacological methods are used to manage pain that may occur in interventional procedures. Some of these methods are: giving sugar solution, kangaroo care, positioning (Kaşıkçıoğlu, 2014), breast milk and breastfeeding and swaddling, listening to music, lullaby. Two other effective methods are non-nutritive suction and white noise. As a result of studies, it was proven that the use of multiple non-pharmacological methods together was much more effective in reducing pain. Within the scope of the research, no research was found in the literature regarding which application - white noise or pacifier - could be more effective. By examining this information, the effects of the two effective methods on pain management and crying time in newborns in the postoperative period were examined in this study.
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Inclusion criteria
Birth weight over 1500 grams
Exclusion criteria
Being intubated
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Interventional model
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30 participants in 2 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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