There is no effect of a parent-directed fact sheet about pain management during childhood immunization and pre-test on parent learning about evidence-based pain relieving methods.
Over 90% of young children demonstrate severe distress during vaccination. Pain relieving strategies are uncommonly used, despite a plethora of evidence for physical, pharmacological and psychological techniques. Parents commonly report pain as a harm-related concern for childhood immunizations and are dissatisfied with current practices. Unmitigated pain causes long-term adverse sequelae, including; anticipatory fear and hypersensitivity to pain at future procedures in children, and parental non-compliance with immunization schedules. Health providers and parents report the major barrier to routine use of pain management is parental lack of knowledge about effective strategies. Lack of time is reported as a secondary barrier. An educational tool about immunization pain management targeted to parents that can be practically implemented in the clinical setting within usual time constraints is needed.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Masking
SINGLE
Enrollment
120
fact sheet about pain management during immunization
Mount Sinai Hospital
Toronto, Ontario, Canada
knowledge
maternal knowledge will be evaluated after reading the fact sheet or control (material unrelated to immunization)
Time frame: 10 minutes after intervention (educational material)
utilization of pain relieving interventions
maternal self-reported use of pain relieving interventions during routine 2-month infant immunizations
Time frame: 2 months after intervention
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