Journal of pediatric psychology
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Clinical Trial Controlled Clinical Trial
Nurse coaching and cartoon distraction: an effective and practical intervention to reduce child, parent, and nurse distress during immunizations.
Evaluated a low cost and practical intervention designed to decrease children's, parents', and nurses' distress during children's immunizations. The intervention consisted of children viewing a popular cartoon movie and being coached by nurses and parents to attend to the movie. Ninety-two children, 4-6 years of age, and their parents were alternatively assigned to either a nurse coach intervention, a nurse coach plus train parent and child intervention, or a standard medical care condition. ⋯ Results indicate that, in the two intervention conditions, children coped more and were less distressed, nurses and parents exhibited more coping promoting behavior and less distress promoting behavior, and parents and nurses were less distressed than in the control condition. Although neither intervention was superior on any of the variables assessed in the study, nurse coach was markedly more practical and cost-effective. Therefore, nurses' coaching of children to watch cartoon movies has great potential for dissemination in pediatric settings.
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Investigated the validity of the Child-Adult Medical Procedure Interaction Scale-Revised (CAMPIS-R) using multiple concurrent objective and subjective measures of child distress, approach-avoidance behavior, fear, pain, child cooperation, and parents' perceived ability to help their preschool children during routine immunizations. Parents', staffs', and children's behaviors in the treatment room were videotaped and coded. ⋯ An unanticipated finding was that the child, parent, and staff Neutral behaviors were inversely related to some measures of distress and positively related to some measures of coping. Interobserver reliability was high for each CAMPIS-R code.
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Evaluated the hypothesis that more effective prognosis is achieved by assessing the modifiability of infants' reactions than by evaluating the presence or absence of normal/abnormal reactions. To evaluate this hypothesis the Neurobehavioral Assessment Scale (NAS) was developed. ⋯ The NAS was administered to 102 high-risk infants repeatedly over the first 16 months of life. Analysis confirmed that the modifiability of performance was predictive of outcome significantly earlier in development than scoring the same items in terms of their normalcy or abnormalcy.
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Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical Trial
A school-based, nurse-administered relaxation training for children with chronic tension-type headache.
Compared the efficacy of a school-based, nurse-administered relaxation training intervention to a no-treatment control condition for children (10-15 years old) with chronic tension-type headache and the outcome at posttreatment and a 6-month follow-up. The study was conducted in a controlled between-group design including 26 schoolchildren who were randomly assigned to the two treatment conditions. ⋯ At these evaluations, 69% and 73% of the pupils, respectively, treated with relaxation had achieved a clinically significant headache improvement (at least a 50% improvement) as compared to 8% and 27% of the pupils, respectively, in the no-treatment control group. Thus, a school-based, nurse-administered relaxation training program seems to be a viable treatment approach for children with chronic tension-type headaches.