• Prof Inferm · Jan 2015

    Review

    Distraction as a technique to control pain in pediatric patients during venipuncture. A narrative review of literature.

    • Carlo Vetri Buratti, Francesco Angelino, Julita Sansoni, Loredana Fabriani, Lucia Mauro, and Roberto Latina.
    • RN, Freelance Nurse, Rome Italy. Correspondence: carlovetriburatti@hotmail.it.
    • Prof Inferm. 2015 Jan 1; 68 (1): 52-62.

    IntroductionDistraction is a non-pharmacological intervention aimed to reduce procedural pain in children. Venipuncture is one of the most widely used diagnostic and therapeutic procedure in pediatric patients. Analgesia during venipuncture may be efficiently achieved with distracting techniques.ObjectiveTo describe active and passive distraction techniques to reduce distress in children undergoing venipuncture.MethodData from CINHAL, PubMed, ILISI and Cochrane's databases were used to review existing literature and primary and secondary studies published between 2003 and 2014 were included. Queries were obtained with keywords such as distraction, complementary therapies, pain, pediatric, the Boolean operators AND and OR were used.ResultTwenty eligible articles out of the one hundred and forty-three retrieved (20/143) were selected; among these there were 3 systematic and 5 narrative reviews, 11 experimental and quasi-experimental studies and 1 observational study. Active and passive distraction techniques seemed extremely effective to reduce distress and pain in children undergoing venipuncture. Modest evidence of efficacy and absent side effects support this approach.ConclusionFurther RCTs are needed to compare the different types of existing active and passive distraction techniques. The presence of parents and the location where painful procedures are administered should be included in the assessment of this approach.

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