Purpose: The purpose of the DNP project “Distraction for Vaccine Injection Pain in Pediatrics: Reducing Pain and Enhancing Patient-Centered Care” was to investigate the efficacy of distraction to decrease pain in children requiring vaccines improving the quality of health services. This was accomplished by: 1)the development and deployment of an age-appropriate Distraction Toolkit consisting of toys and books for children ages 4-6 years requiring vaccines; 2) Evaluation of pre and post-vaccination pain scores; and 3) Based on Likert scale survey responses results determined if the use of the distraction intervention is something that can be incorporated into daily practice. Background: It is not surprising to find that children have inadequ...
Distraction has been shown to be an effective technique for managing pain in children; however, few ...
Background & Aim: Pain is an unpleasant experience related to potential or actual tissue damage. Dis...
This study used quasi-experimental research design. Sixty (60) respondents were chosen using purposi...
Purpose: Immunizations are the single most common painful procedure pediatric patients experience in...
Background: Vaccines, which are very important aspects of a child’s health are aimed at keeping chil...
ABSTRACT BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: Vaccine is the most common source of pain in childhood, which c...
Distraction with Routine Childhood Immunizations Abstract Most of us have been through the process o...
Do distraction techniques provide adequate pain management in the pediatric population? If so, what ...
BACKGROUND: Analgesic interventions are not commonly administered during childhood vaccination, desp...
Vaccines are the most common source of iatrogenic pain in infants and studies have shown that parent...
Objectives: Vaccinations protect children against deadly diseases and approximately 30 immunizations...
Injections for vaccinations, the most common source ofiatrogenic pain in childhood,1 are administere...
Pain is described as "an unpleasant, subjective sensory and emotional experience associated with exi...
intravenous insertion is the cause of pain that the children most commonly experience when children ...
INTRODUCTION: Despite the availability of a variety of evidence-based interventions, it has previous...
Distraction has been shown to be an effective technique for managing pain in children; however, few ...
Background & Aim: Pain is an unpleasant experience related to potential or actual tissue damage. Dis...
This study used quasi-experimental research design. Sixty (60) respondents were chosen using purposi...
Purpose: Immunizations are the single most common painful procedure pediatric patients experience in...
Background: Vaccines, which are very important aspects of a child’s health are aimed at keeping chil...
ABSTRACT BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: Vaccine is the most common source of pain in childhood, which c...
Distraction with Routine Childhood Immunizations Abstract Most of us have been through the process o...
Do distraction techniques provide adequate pain management in the pediatric population? If so, what ...
BACKGROUND: Analgesic interventions are not commonly administered during childhood vaccination, desp...
Vaccines are the most common source of iatrogenic pain in infants and studies have shown that parent...
Objectives: Vaccinations protect children against deadly diseases and approximately 30 immunizations...
Injections for vaccinations, the most common source ofiatrogenic pain in childhood,1 are administere...
Pain is described as "an unpleasant, subjective sensory and emotional experience associated with exi...
intravenous insertion is the cause of pain that the children most commonly experience when children ...
INTRODUCTION: Despite the availability of a variety of evidence-based interventions, it has previous...
Distraction has been shown to be an effective technique for managing pain in children; however, few ...
Background & Aim: Pain is an unpleasant experience related to potential or actual tissue damage. Dis...
This study used quasi-experimental research design. Sixty (60) respondents were chosen using purposi...