One of the most common and painful procedures in newborns is taking a capillary blood sample from the heel. This basic procedure, widely used in early health assessments, particularly in newborn screening tests, can cause mild to moderate pain.While both pharmacological and non-pharmacological approaches are used in pain management in newborns, the primary goal is to minimize and prevent painful stimuli as much as possible. Non-pharmacological methods are preferred in newborn care because they have no side effects, are easy to apply, low-cost, and caregiver-friendly.
This study was designed as a prospective, three-arm, parallel-group randomized controlled trial. It focused on non-pharmacological methods (lavender oil, mandarin oil, control group/standard care).Mothers of newborns meeting the recruitment criteria were informed of the study before heel prick testing and provided verbal and written consent. The standard approach involves performing heel prick testing on all newborns in their mothers' arms.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
HEALTH_SERVICES_RESEARCH
Masking
SINGLE
Enrollment
120
experiment
Sakarya University
Sakarya, Turkey (Türkiye)
crying times
measuring the crying duration with a stopwatch
Time frame: Before the procedure, during the procedure, and for a total of 10 minutes after the procedure.
heart rate
Measurement with pulse oximeter
Time frame: Before the procedure, during the procedure, and for a total of 10 minutes after the procedure.
Neonatal infant pain scale
The scale includes f ive behavioral parameters (facial expression, crying, armmovements, leg movements, and state of arousal) and one physiological parameter (breathing patterns). Each behavior is scored 0-1; the crying parameter is scored 0-1-2. The lowest score is 0 and the highest score is 7.
Time frame: Before the procedure, during the procedure, and for a total of 10 minutes after the procedure.
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