At a glance
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Cartoon Distraction and Parental Presence During Induction of Anesthesia on Preoperative Anxiety and Postoperative Behavior Change in Children Undergoing General Anesthesia
In Brief
A clinical study evaluating Cartoon and parental presence for Anxiety, Separation and Psychomotor Agitation. Completed, enrolled 117 participants across 1 site.
Detailed Summary
Nearly 50% of young children undergoing surgery exhibit high level of anxiety during induction of anesthesia because of exposure to unfamiliar environment and people and separation from parents. Increased preoperative anxiety may impact postoperative behavior changes such as emergence agitation, separation anxiety and sleep disturbance. Although some pediatric anesthesiologists routinely permit parental presence to reduce the anxiety during induction of anesthesia, previous studies have reported conflicting results. Recently the distraction using video game or animated cartoon has been reported to reduce anxiety of young children during induction of anesthesia. However, it was still undetermined whether distraction has its own ability to reduce children's anxiety separated from parental presence because they evaluated the effect of video method in the parental presence. The investigators design to investigated the efficacy of distraction with watching cartoon, parental presence and combined with watching cartoon and parental presence on reduction of anxiety during inhalational induction of anesthesia using sevoflurane. In addition this study includes long-term effect of each intervention such as postoperative emergence agitation and postoperative behavior change in children.
Study Details
Timeline
Interventions
Cartoon watching by children during inhalational induction of sevoflurane
parental presence during inhalational induction of sevoflurane