4.6 Article

Virtual reality for acute pain in outpatient hysteroscopy: a randomised controlled trial

Journal

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/1471-0528.16377

Keywords

Anxiety; outpatient hysteroscopy; pain; randomised controlled trial; virtual reality

Funding

  1. NIHR Patient safety Research Centre

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In a study evaluating the effectiveness of virtual reality as a distraction technique in managing acute pain and anxiety during outpatient hysteroscopy, it was found that virtual reality intervention led to lower levels of pain and anxiety compared to standard care.
Objective To evaluate the effectiveness of virtual reality as a distraction technique in the management of acute pain and anxiety during outpatient hysteroscopy. Design Parallel group, prospective randomised controlled trial. Setting UK University Hospital. Methods Forty consenting, eligible women were randomised to virtual reality intervention (immersive video content as a distraction method) or standard care during outpatient hysteroscopy from August to October 2018. Main outcome measures Pain and anxiety outcomes were measured as a numeric rating score (scale 0-10). Results Compared with standard care, women with virtual reality intervention experienced less average pain (score 6.0 versus 3.7, mean difference 2.3, 95% CI 0.61-3.99,P = 0.009) and anxiety (score 5.45 versus 3.3, mean difference 2.15, 95% CI 0.38-3.92,P = 0.02). Conclusion Virtual reality was effective in reducing pain and anxiety during outpatient hysteroscopy in a mixed-methods randomised control trial. Its wide potential role in ambulatory gynaecological procedures needs further evaluation. Tweetable abstract Virtual reality can be used as a part of a multimodal strategy to reduce acute pain and anxiety in patients undergoing outpatient hysteroscopy.

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