Study Results
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Basic Information
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COMPLETED
NA
80 participants
INTERVENTIONAL
2023-08-01
2024-07-01
Brief Summary
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The hypotheses it aims to answer are as follows:
H1: Inhalers given using a mask with a cartoon character facilitate treatment compliance.
H2: The inhaler given using a mask with a cartoon character makes treatment compliance difficult.
H3: Inhaler treatment using a mask with a cartoon hero increases parental satisfaction.
H4: Inhaler treatment using a mask with a cartoon hero decreases parental satisfaction.
H5: Inhaler treatment using a mask with a cartoon hero has a positive effect on the hospitalization process.
H6: Inhaler treatment using a mask with a cartoon hero has a positive effect on the recovery process.
H7: Compared to routine inhaler mask use, the use of masks with cartoon heroes provides a positive relationship between treatment adherence and parental satisfaction.
In the study, according to randomization, the intervention group will receive inhalers with masks, and the other group will receive inhalers routinely used in the clinic. The treatment of the children was planned by the physician, and no additional treatment was given for the study. Children's adherence to treatment and parents; satisfaction will be evaluated. The effectiveness of the masked inhaler used will be asked.
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Detailed Description
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Play is a form of learning that facilitates children's adaptation to the outside world by providing them with new experiences, skills, and social responsibility, and enables them to communicate by exploring their environment. Play is defined by the United Nations High Commission for Human Rights as the right of every child that contributes to the development of the child. In the literature, it is reported that play is effective in reducing the anxiety and fear of hospitalized children and is necessary to provide holistic and quality care. It has also been reported that it does not benefit their recovery by relaxing them both physically and emotionally.
Games are categorized under four headings according to their purpose: entertaining and distracting games, games that support the development of cognitive, social, and sensorimotor skills, games that teach right and wrong, provide socialization, make people aware of and accept their biological existence as men or women, and therapeutic games to relieve anxiety and tension. Games can be used in clinics as healing practices (therapeutic practices). Although therapeutic play and play therapy are used interchangeably, they are conceptually and practically quite different. The spontaneous creation of activities using toys without predetermined goals is referred to as play therapy.
Therapeutic play that activates physiological functions is used in cases where the child exhibits regressive behavior, drama therapeutic play that allows emotional discharge, and educational/creative therapeutic play is used to prepare children for procedures.
There are three types of therapeutic play:
1. Energy Expending Play: Children show their aggressive behavior, anger, and anxiety by shouting, punching, and running. To direct these emotions in the hospital, areas for this purpose should be created or appropriate materials should be provided. In this way, their aggressive behavior, anger, and anxiety levels can be reduced.
2. Dramatic Play: Playing by imitating life and events to understand them better is defined as dramatic play.
By using dramatic play, it is ensured that the child expresses his/her feelings about the interventions to be applied in the hospital environment and major events. For this purpose, playing with medical equipment such as masks, stethoscopes, and IV sets during the game can be effective in reducing the stress of children and expressing what they feel.
3. Creative Play: This is the type of play used to show children how each procedure is done by using materials before and after the procedures. In creative play, methods such as drawing pictures, sentence completion, and three wishes tests are used to collect information about the inner world of the child.
The main aim of the therapeutic relationship in pediatric nursing is to maintain the health, growth, and development of the child and his/her family at the highest possible level. Nurses help children and their parents to maintain their health and develop adaptation by gaining effective coping skills in case of illness or any lifestyle change.
Nurses can use play as a health care strategy for hospitalized children in three areas. The first of these areas is its use in routine practices. Secondly, it is recommended to use it in preparation for surgical or invasive interventions and finally during painful and unpleasant procedures.
For nurses, play is key to understanding the child. Therapeutic play helps children to express their feelings and thoughts verbally or non-verbally about the procedures to be applied. The nurse adapts therapeutic play to care and provides nursing care in line with the information gathered through play. Florence Nightingale, the founder of modern nursing, emphasized the necessity of play for hospitalized children. Studies have reported that therapeutic play practice contributes to holistic and specific nursing care and that therapeutic play is an effective method. However, it was found that most of them did not use it in daily nursing practices due to reasons such as lack of time.
In the last decade, it has been known that showing videos and distributing booklets and coloring books to children at the pre-anesthetic visit is beneficial. Arranging the anesthesia mask to resemble popular characters among children (such as birds, and cartoon characters), having children put the masks on their faces and look at the fun face mask in the mirror and blowing on the balloon, making it look like a magic ball, allowing children to stick the stickers they like on the anesthesia mask as a game facilitates induction of anesthesia. With pharmacological premedication appropriate to these nonpharmacological methods, anxiety can be prevented, psychological injuries can be reduced, induction of anesthesia can be facilitated, and preoperative anxiety of the child can be reduced.
Conditions
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Study Design
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RANDOMIZED
PARALLEL
SUPPORTIVE_CARE
SINGLE
Study Groups
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Inhaler mask with cartoon characters
Inhalation therapy with cartoon characters inhaler mask and Inhaler therapy training
Cartoon characters inhaler mask
Cartoon characters inhaler mask
Inhaler mask
Inhalation therapy with the inhaler mask routinely used by the clinic and Inhaler therapy training
No interventions assigned to this group
Interventions
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Cartoon characters inhaler mask
Cartoon characters inhaler mask
Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
* Being in a pediatric clinic
* Being diagnosed with respiratory system diseases
* Being on inhaler therapy as part of routine treatment
* Self and parent's consent to participate in the study
Exclusion Criteria
* Not taking inhaler therapy routinely
* Being a foreign national
3 Years
12 Years
ALL
No
Sponsors
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Istinye University
OTHER
Responsible Party
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Principal Investigators
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Aysegul Simsek
Role: STUDY_DIRECTOR
Istinye University
Locations
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Istinye University
Istanbul, Zeytınburnu, Turkey (Türkiye)
Countries
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References
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Gül, O. (2015). The effect of game on pre-school period (ages 3-6): A review of study. Turkish Journal of Sport and Exercise, 17(3), 1. https://doi.org/10.15314/tjse.
Ginsburg KR; American Academy of Pediatrics Committee on Communications; American Academy of Pediatrics Committee on Psychosocial Aspects of Child and Family Health. The importance of play in promoting healthy child development and maintaining strong parent-child bonds. Pediatrics. 2007 Jan;119(1):182-91. doi: 10.1542/peds.2006-2697.
Francischinelli, A. G., Almeida, F. A. &, & Fernandes, M. S. (2012). Routine use of therapeutic play in the care of hospitalized children: nurses' perceptions. Acta Paul Enferm, 25(1), 18-23. https://doi.org/10.1590/S0103- 21002012000100004
Çavuşoğlu H. (2013). Child Health Nursing. Ankara: System Ofset Printing House: p. 67-69
Çiftçi, E. N. (2011). The effect of visual and auditory premedication on mask induction in children. Trakya University, Faculty of Medicine, Specialization Thesis (Advisor Sevtap Hekimoğlu Şahin), Edirne.
Berna, I. K., Ceren, Ç., & Esenay Figen. (2013). Therapeutic play: the key to communication with the sick child. Ankara Journal of Health Sciences, 2(123), 1-10. https://doi.org/10.1501/Asbd_0000000038
Aydın T, Şahin L, Algın C, Kabay Ş, Yücel M, Hacıoğlu A et al. Do not mask the mask: use it a premedicant. Pediatric Anesthesia 2008;18:107-12.
Altay, N. C. (2008). Preoperative preparation in children. Hacettepe University Faculty of Health Sciences Nursing Journal, 68-76.
Koukourikos K, Tzeha L, Pantelidou P, Tsaloglidou A. THE IMPORTANCE OF PLAY DURING HOSPITALIZATION OF CHILDREN. Mater Sociomed. 2015 Dec;27(6):438-41. doi: 10.5455/msm.2015.27.438-441.
Other Identifiers
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23/185
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
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