3.8 Article

The impact of medical clowns exposure over postoperative pain and anxiety in children and caregivers: An Israeli experience

Journal

PEDIATRIC REPORTS
Volume 11, Issue 3, Pages 44-48

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.4081/pr.2019.8165

Keywords

pain reduction; hernia; clown-doctors; cortisol; pediatric surgery

Categories

Funding

  1. Dream Doctors Project non-profit organization, Israel

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While postoperative pain management was shown to reduce unwanted physiological and emotional outcomes, pediatric postoperative pain management remains suboptimal. Medical-clowns were shown to be beneficial in many medical contexts including reduction of stress, anxiety and pain. This study was set to assess the effectiveness of medical-clowns on pediatric postoperative pain reduction. Children age 4 or above, planned for elective hernia repair surgery were recruited. Children were randomly divided to a control or medical-clown escorted groups. Demographical and clinical data were collected using questionnaires and electronic sheets. Children escorted by clowns reported lower levels of pain upon admittance, discharge and 12-hours post-surgery. Statistically significant reduction of parental distress and significantly higher serum cortisol levels were observed in the clown-therapy group. Although small, our study supports the possibility that preoperative medical-clown therapy might be a cheap, safe and yet beneficial method for postoperative pain reduction.

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