Litcius/Paper detail

Non-pharmacological management of infant and young child procedural pain

Rebecca Pillai Riddell, Oana Bucsea, Ilana Shiff, Cheryl H. T. Chow, Hannah Gennis, Shaylea D. Badovinac, Miranda G. DiLorenzo-Klas, Nicole Racine, Sara Ahola Kohut, Diana Lisi, Kara Turcotte, Bonnie Stevens, Lindsay S Uman

2023Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews75 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Despite evidence of the long-term implications of unrelieved pain during infancy, it is evident that infant pain is still under-managed and unmanaged. Inadequately managed pain in infancy, a period of exponential development, can have implications across the lifespan. Therefore, a comprehensive and systematic review of pain management strategies is integral to appropriate infant pain management. This is an update of a previously published review update in the Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews (2015, Issue 12) of the same title. OBJECTIVES: To assess the efficacy and adverse events of non-pharmacological interventions for infant and child (aged up to three years) acute pain, excluding kangaroo care, sucrose, breastfeeding/breast milk, and music. SEARCH METHODS: = 74%, substantial heterogeneity), based on low- to moderate-certainty evidence. Of these five interventions most studied, only two studies observed adverse events, specifically vomiting (one preterm neonate) and desaturation (one full-term neonate hospitalised in the NICU) following the non-nutritive sucking intervention. The presence of considerable heterogeneity limited our confidence in the findings for certain analyses, as did the preponderance of evidence of very low to low certainty based on GRADE judgements. AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: Overall, non-nutritive sucking, facilitated tucking, and swaddling may reduce pain behaviours in preterm born neonates. Non-nutritive sucking may also reduce pain behaviours in full-term neonates. No interventions based on a substantial body of evidence showed promise in reducing pain behaviours in older infants. Most analyses were based on very low- or low-certainty grades of evidence and none were based on high-certainty evidence. Therefore, the lack of confidence in the evidence would require further research before we could draw a definitive conclusion.

Topics & Concepts

Pain managementMedicineSystematic reviewMEDLINEPediatricsPhysical therapyPolitical scienceLawPediatric Pain Management TechniquesInfant Development and Preterm CareInfant Health and Development
Non-pharmacological management of infant and young child procedural pain | Litcius