3 research outputs found

    Non-pharmacological management of infant and young child procedural pain: An abridged Cochrane review

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    BACKGROUND: Acute pain and distress during medical procedures are commonplace for young children. OBJECTIVE: To assess the efficacy of nonpharmacological interventions for acute procedural pain in children up to three years of age. METHODS: Study inclusion criteria were: participants <3 years of age, involved in a randomized controlled or crossover trial, and use of a β€˜no-treatment’ control group (51 studies; n=3396). Additional studies meeting all criteria except for study design (eg, use of active control group) were qualitatively described (n=20). RESULTS: For every intervention, data were analyzed separately according to age group (preterm-born, term-born neonate and older infant/young child) and type of pain response (pain reactivity, immediate pain-related regulation). The largest standardized mean differences (SMD) for pain reactivity were as follows: sucking-related interventions (preterm: βˆ’0.42 [95% CI βˆ’0.68 to βˆ’0.15]; neonate βˆ’1.45 [CI βˆ’2.34 to βˆ’0.57]), kangaroo care (preterm βˆ’1.12 [95% CI βˆ’2.04 to βˆ’0.21]), and swaddling/facilitated tucking (preterm βˆ’0.97 [95% CI βˆ’1.63 to βˆ’0.31]). For immediate pain-related regulation, the largest SMDs were: sucking-related interventions (preterm βˆ’0.38 [95% CI βˆ’0.59 to βˆ’0.17]; neonate βˆ’0.90 [CI βˆ’1.54 to βˆ’0.25]), kangaroo care 0.77 (95% CI βˆ’1.50 to βˆ’0.03]), swaddling/facilitated tucking (preterm βˆ’0.75 [95% CI βˆ’1.14 to βˆ’0.36]), and rocking/holding (neonate βˆ’0.75 [95% CI βˆ’1.20 to βˆ’0.30]). The presence of significant heterogeneity limited confidence in nonsignificant findings for certain other analyses. CONCLUSIONS: Although a number of nonpharmacological treatments have sufficient evidence supporting their efficacy with preterm infants and healthy neonates, no treatments had sufficient evidence to support efficacy with healthy older infants/young children
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