Children are distressed at anesthesia induction and this distress can result in maladaptive recovery outcomes. Having parents be present at anesthesia induction (PPIA) has been suggested as a potential intervention to decrease children's distress, and this intervention is widely favored by parents. However, to date, PPIA has not been found to be effective in reducing children's anxiety. The lack of efficacy may be attributable to the fact that parents have generally not been prepared for PPIA. The one study that prepared parents (as part of a larger preoperative preparation program) found that PPIA with preparation was superior to PPIA as previously studied (without preparation). Unfortunately, this program is resource intensive and therefore is not clinically feasible. This study will compare PPIA with a clinically feasible preparation program to PPIA with standard care (minimal preparation). Should our intervention show evidence of efficacy, the investigators will have designed a program that is easily translatable to everyday clinical practice. This will, in turn, reduce children's anxiety, improve postoperative outcomes and increase parental satisfaction.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
PREVENTION
Masking
SINGLE
Enrollment
104
IWK Health Centre
Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada
Modified Yale Pre-Operative Anxiety Scale
Yale Preoperative Anxiety Scale (mYPAS; Kain et al., 1997). This researcher completed measure is made up of 5 categories (e.g., activity, vocalizations) each rated on ordinal behaviorally anchored scales. Total scores on the measure range from 23 to 100, with higher scores indicating higher child anxiety at induction. The tool has shown good convergent validity with another measure of child anxiety (r = 0.79), and excellent inter-rater reliability (kappa range 0.63-0.90). A cutoff score of 30 has been shown to have the best balance of sensitivity (0.85) and specificity (0.92). NOTE: Most of the measure is administered post-treatment, but part of it begins pre-treatment at baseline.
Time frame: post-treatment (following intervention); average=15 minutes after treatment
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