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NOT YET RECRUITING
NCT06591195
NA

Distraction As Multimodal Pain Management

Sponsor: Radboud University Medical Center

View on ClinicalTrials.gov

Summary

A randomized controlled trial will be performed at the Ngwelezana Hospital, Empangeni, South Africa. Paediatric patients between the age of 5-12 years with minor and superficial partial thickness burn injuries who require dressing changes in the outpatient clinic, without sedation, will be randomized into two groups: the control group will receive standard practice of care which concerns a dressing change without any distraction methods, and the intervention group will receive distraction by use of a kaleidoscope as additional method for potential pain alleviation. Patients in both groups will receive paracetamol or non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs when required according to hospital protocol. The primary outcome will be the change in pain score from pre-procedural to pain score during the dressing change and will be analysed with a linear regression analysis. Additionally, sub analyses will be performed to evaluate potentially modifying factors on the treatment effect. This will also be evaluated with a linear regression analysis. This will be correlated with care giver and health care worker observational pain scores.

Official title: Distraction As Multimodal Pain Management for Children in Resource-constrained Settings (DISTRACT)

Key Details

Gender

All

Age Range

5 Years - 12 Years

Study Type

INTERVENTIONAL

Enrollment

126

Start Date

2024-10

Completion Date

2026-10

Last Updated

2024-09-19

Healthy Volunteers

No

Interventions

DEVICE

Distraction by use of kaleidoscope

À kaleidoscope is an optical device consisting of mirrors that reflect images of bits of coloured glass in a symmetrical geometric design through a viewer. A kaleidoscope was selected as the non-electronic method of distraction, because of its wide availability due to low costs, its evolving and colourful visual stimuli, the fact that is blocks out any visualisations from the environment when used properly, and because it requires active participation (i.e., greater attention) from the subject.