The Effectiveness of Virtual Reality in Reducing Pain Intensity During Wound Dressing Changes in Children and Adolescents with Burn Injuries: A Systematic Review
Date
2023-12-01
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
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Publisher
Saudi Digital Library
Abstract
Background: Children and adolescents who suffer burn injuries often
experience pain when their wounds are being dressed which can have an
impact on their overall physical and mental well-being. Distraction with
Virtual Reality (VR) has emerged as a non-conventional tactic to alleviate
pain in different medical settings. The aim of this systematic review is to
evaluate the effectiveness of VR in easing pain intensity during wound
care procedures like dressing changes in paediatric burns compared to
conventional wound care.
Methods: A comprehensive search was conducted in the COCHRANE
database, CINAHL, PubMed, and Medline to find relevant articles published
that examined the effectiveness of using virtual reality as a distraction
technique for managing pain during wound dressing changes in children
and adolescents with burn injuries. The focus of the systematic review
was on reducing the intensity of pain. Data were analysed and synthesized
using a systematic review without meta-analysis.
Results: A total of 527 articles were identified, with 404 from the
COCHRANE Central database and the rest from other databases. After
screening and assessing eligibility, 8 studies were included in this
systematic review. Initial analysis suggests that VR distraction could
effectively lower pain intensity during wound dressing changes for
paediatric and adolescent burn patients. However, more investigation is
needed to validate these results and ascertain the most suitable
application of VR distraction in this group.
Conclusion: Virtual reality distraction shows promise as a successful
intervention to alleviate pain severity during the process of changing
dressings for children and adolescents with burn injuries. This systematic
review highlights the need for additional high-quality studies to strengthen
the evidence base and provide guidance for the integration of VR
distraction into standard wound care protocols.
Description
Keywords
burn injuries, virtual reality, wound dressing change, pain management, paediatric, adolescent, systematic review, randomised controlled trials.