The goal of this randomized controlled study is to assess the effect of guided imagery on chemotherapy-related nausea and vomiting in pediatric oncology patients. Participants will receive either guided imagery+routine care or routine care. The researchers will compare nausea and vomiting and vital signs between groups.
Despite significant advances in anti-emetic treatment, chemotherapy induced nausea and vomiting (CINV) is considered a major side-effect that significantly reduces the quality of life of children diagnosed with cancer. Guided imagery is one of the methods of distraction that allows the individual to go to an environment or scene that will make the individual comfortable, peaceful, happy, and focused. In this study, the participants will be randomized in a single blind manner (participant) to either intervention or control groups.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
PREVENTION
Masking
DOUBLE
Enrollment
40
The children in the experimental group will listen to the first part of the 'Guided Imagery CD' prepared by the Turkish Psychological Association for relaxation 30 minutes before the chemotherapy infusion starts. The suggestions given in the first part of the CD will help the patients relax and focus their attention on their breathing. Patients will be positioned in a supine or semi-fowler position and will listen to the CD with headphones from a laptop. Once the chemotherapy infusion starts, relaxing light background music with the sound of a river or sea will be played based on the patients' preference, and imagery will be applied to the patients. Patients will be encouraged to think of various images, such as imagining that the treatment is over, visualizing themselves as much healthier and recovering quickly, returning to their old life, and doing whatever they want to do first after recovery. If there is an object, person, event, situation, or food that will make them feel good,
Hacettepe University İhsan Doğramacı Hospital
Ankara, Ankara, Turkey (Türkiye)
RECRUITINGNausea and vomiting
Nausea and Vomiting Thermometer Scale in Children with Cancer is a 5-likert type scale. An increase in the score indicates an increase in the degree of nausea and vomiting experienced by children with cancer.
Time frame: 30 minutes before the procedure, halfway through the chemotherapy infusion, immediately after the procedure, and for the first 24 hours after the end of chemotherapy
Heart rate
Maintaining or normalizing heart rate within normal range (60 to 110 bpm)
Time frame: 30 minutes before the procedure, halfway through the chemotherapy infusion, and immediately after the procedure,
Systolic and diastolic blood pressure
Maintaining or normalizing systolic and blood pressure within normal range (systolic: 90-120 mmHg; diastolic 60-80 mmHg)
Time frame: 30 minutes before the procedure, halfway through the chemotherapy infusion, and immediately after the procedure
Respiratory rate
Maintaining or normalizing respiratory rate within normal range (18-30 breath per minute)
Time frame: 30 minutes before the procedure, halfway through the chemotherapy infusion, and immediately after the procedure
Body temperature
Maintaining or normalizing body temperature within normal range (36-37 C° in tympanic measurement)
Time frame: 30 minutes before the procedure, halfway through the chemotherapy infusion, and immediately after the procedure
Oxygen saturation
Maintaining or normalizing oxygen saturation within normal range (between 95%-100% by pulse oximetry)
Time frame: change from baseline 60 minutes of chemotherapy infusion
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