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Children’s Pain During IV Induction: A Randomized-Controlled Trial With the MEDi® Robot

Rachelle Lee-Krueger, Jacqueline Reynolds Pearson, Adam Spencer, Mélanie Noël, Lisa Bell-Graham, Tanya Beran

2021Journal of Pediatric Psychology16 citationsDOI

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: This study examined the impact of a humanoid robot (MEDi®) programmed to teach deep breathing as a coping strategy, on children's pain and fear as primary and secondary outcomes, respectively, during intravenous (IV) line placement. The completion of IV induction was also examined as an exploratory outcome. METHODS: In this randomized controlled, two-armed trial, 137 children (4-12 years) were recruited in Short Stay Surgery at a tertiary pediatric hospital. Patients were randomly assigned to standard care (SC) with Ametop© only (N = 60) or SC and robot-facilitated intervention (N = 59) before induction. Pain and fear before, during, and after IV insertion were rated by patients and observers. RESULTS: No significant differences were found between groups and there were no changes over time for pain or fear (ps > .05). Exploratory analyses show that patients in the MEDi® group were 5.04 times more likely to complete IV induction, compared to SC, Fisher's exact test: X2 (1) = 4.85, p = .04, φc = 0.22, odds ratio = 5.04, 95% CI [1.06, 24.00]. CONCLUSION: This study was the first to examine children's IV induction experience when provided MEDi® support. Reasons for nonsignificance, limitations, and research suggestions were made.

Topics & Concepts

Randomized controlled trialMedicineCoping (psychology)Odds ratioPhysical therapyAnesthesiaClinical psychologySurgeryInternal medicinePediatric Pain Management TechniquesAirway Management and Intubation TechniquesAnesthesia and Sedative Agents
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