Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT04714255

Efficacy of Art Intervention on Decreasing Pain and Anxiety During Intravenous Cannulation

The Efficacy of Art Intervention on Decreasing Pain and Anxiety During Intravenous Cannulation

Status
Completed
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
100 (actual)
Sponsor
University of Witten/Herdecke · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
6 Years – 12 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

Peripheral Intravenous Cannulation (PIVC), one of the most common therapeutic procedures in medical care, can be difficult even for experienced medical practitioners. The pain of intravenous cannulation is considered the major limitation in pediatric clinical care. Reducing the pain of intravenous cannulation has been the motive for many investigations. Intervention methods used to reduce the distress related to painful procedures are widely recommended. The management of pain and anxiety is more essential because it may modify children's memory for procedural pain and the subsequent acceptance of later health care painful interventions. Distraction is the most studied psychological technique to relieve venipuncture-related pain and distress, with strong evidence supporting its efficacy in children. Art therapy commonly used to reduce pain and anxiety of children's disease but was not used in reducing distress outcomes of painful procedures. We used a collection of the image need for coloring and tracing called Trace Image and Coloring for Kids-Book (TICK-B). The purpose of this study is to exam the effectiveness of TICK-B in decreasing pain and anxiety during cannulation.

Detailed description

Peripheral Intravenous Cannulation (PIVC), one of the most common therapeutic procedures in medical care, can be difficult even for experienced medical practitioners. The pain of intravenous cannulation is considered the major limitation in pediatric clinical care. Reducing the pain of intravenous cannulation has been the motive for many investigations. Intervention methods used to reduce the distress related to painful procedures are widely recommended. The management of pain and anxiety is more essential because it may modify children's memory for procedural pain and the subsequent acceptance of later health care painful interventions. Distraction is the most studied psychological technique to relieve venipuncture-related pain and distress, with strong evidence supporting its efficacy in children. Art therapy commonly used to reduce pain and anxiety of children's disease but was not used in reducing distress outcomes of painful procedures. We used a collection of the image need for coloring and tracing called Trace Image and Coloring for Kids-Book (TICK-B). The purpose of this study is to exam the effectiveness of TICK-B in decreasing pain and anxiety during cannulation.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
OTHERTrace Image and Coloring for Kids-Book (TICK-B)A collection of images attractive that need to be colored, created as a book called TICK-B. This book was created with the instructions and recommendations of a pediatric psychiatrist and a professional drawing teacher at a children's school.Distraction with TICK-B began 1-3 min. before the intravenous cannula procedure and lasted until the end of the procedure.

Timeline

Start date
2019-11-03
Primary completion
2020-02-05
Completion
2020-02-05
First posted
2021-01-19
Last updated
2021-04-01

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Germany

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT04714255. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.