Pillai Riddell Rebecca, Taddio Anna, McMurtry C Meghan, Chambers Christine, Shah Vibhuti, Noel Melanie
*Department of Psychology, York University †Department of Psychiatry, The Hospital for Sick Children §Child Health and Evaluative Sciences ∥∥Department of Neonatology ‡Department of Psychiatry ∥Leslie Dan Faculty of Pharmacy §§Faculty of Medicine, University of Toronto ‡‡Mount Sinai Hospital, Toronto, ON ¶Department of Psychology, University of Guelph, Guelph #Children's Health Research Institute, Children's Hospital **Department of Paediatrics, Western University, London, ON ††Department of Pediatrics and Psychology, Centre for Pediatric Pain Research, IWK Health Centre, Dalhousie University, Halifax, NS, Canada ¶¶Department of Psychology, University of Calgary, AB, Canada.
Clin J Pain. 2015 Oct;31(10 Suppl):S64-71. doi: 10.1097/AJP.0000000000000279.
This systematic review evaluated the effectiveness of distraction for reducing infant distress during vaccinations in young children aged 0 to 3 years.
DESIGN/METHODS: Database searches identified relevant randomized and quasi-randomized controlled trials. Three separate clinical questions related to variants of the psychological strategy of distraction (directed video; directed toy; nondirected toy) were pursued. Distress was identified as the critical outcome to assess the benefits of distraction and extracted from relevant trials. Distress was analyzed by phase of procedure (distress preprocedure; distress acute; distress recovery; idiosyncratic phases based on some or all of the 3 aforementioned phases).
Ten studies were included in the review. Significant results are presented herein. For directed video distraction, moderate quality evidence suggested that distress was lowered in the treatment group standardized mean difference (SMD -0.68 lower [95% confidence interval (CI), -1.04 to -0.32]) for the acute+recovery phase as well as the preprocedure phase (SMD -0.49 lower [95% CI, -7.6 to -0.22]). For directed toy distraction, the analysis of low-quality evidence for a combined preprocedure+acute+recovery phase of distress (analysis n=81), suggested that distress was lowered in the treatment group (SMD -0.47 lower [95% CI, -0.91 to -0.02]). An effect for nondirected toy distraction was also seen, analyzing very-low-quality evidence, for the acute distress phase (n=290; SMD -0.93 lower [95% CI, -1.86 to 0.00]).
Generally low-quality to very-low-quality evidence suggests that there may be an effect of directed (toy and video) and nondirected toy distraction for children aged 0 to 3 years, for certain phases of the vaccination.
本系统评价评估了分散注意力对减轻0至3岁幼儿接种疫苗时的痛苦的有效性。
设计/方法:通过数据库检索确定相关的随机和半随机对照试验。探讨了与分散注意力的心理策略变体(定向视频;定向玩具;非定向玩具)相关的三个独立临床问题。痛苦被确定为评估分散注意力益处的关键结果,并从相关试验中提取。根据程序阶段(术前痛苦;急性痛苦;痛苦恢复;基于上述三个阶段中的一些或全部的特殊阶段)对痛苦进行分析。
本评价纳入了10项研究。此处呈现了显著结果。对于定向视频分散注意力,中等质量证据表明,在急性+恢复阶段以及术前阶段,治疗组的痛苦降低(标准化均值差[SMD]降低0.�8[95%置信区间(CI),-1.04至-0.32])。对于定向玩具分散注意力,对术前+急性+恢复阶段痛苦合并分析的低质量证据(分析n=81)表明,治疗组的痛苦降低(SMD降低0.47[95%CI,-0.91至-0.02])。对于非定向玩具分散注意力,在急性痛苦阶段分析极低质量证据时也观察到了效果(n=290;SMD降低0.93[95%CI,-1.86至0.00])。
总体而言,低质量至极低质量的证据表明,对于0至3岁的儿童,在接种疫苗的某些阶段,定向(玩具和视频)和非定向玩具分散注意力可能有效果。