ShotBloker and Helfer Skin Tap Technique During Intramuscular Injection in Children
Pain, Acute, Fear, Emergencies
About this trial
This is an interventional health services research trial for Pain, Acute
Eligibility Criteria
Inclusion Criteria:
- To be 6-12 years old,
- Volunteering to participate in the research,
- Not having a chronic disease, not having a mental or neurological disability,
- Being able to communicate verbally,
- Not taking any medication that has an analgesic effect at least 6 hours before applying to the emergency room.
- Not have a life-threatening (sepsis, shock, respiratory/cardiogenic arrest, etc.) disease
Exclusion Criteria:
- Not to be between the ages of 6-12,
- Not volunteering to participate in the research,
- Having a chronic disease, mental or neurological disability,
- Taking any analgesic medication at least 6 hours before applying to the emergency room
- Having a life-threatening (sepsis, shock, respiratory/cardiogenic arrest, etc.) disease
Sites / Locations
- Tarsus State Hospital
Arms of the Study
Arm 1
Arm 2
Arm 3
Experimental
Experimental
No Intervention
Helfer Skin Tap
Shotblocker
control group
Helfer Skin Tap (rhythmic tapping of the skin at the injection site to relax the muscles during injection) is an effective method in reducing pain in intramuscular applications in studies performed with the injection technique. Before the injection, the observer nurse will fill in the demographic data form, measure the child's heart rate, blood pressure and SpO2 values, and apply the pain and fear assessment scale. In addition, the pain and fear scale will be evaluated by the child and the parent. During the intramuscular injection to be applied to the ventrogluteal region, the level of pain and fear will be examined using the Helfer skin tap technique. 5 minutes after the injection, the pain and fear level of the children in all groups will be re-evaluated by the child, the mother and the observing nurse. After the procedure, pulse, blood pressure and SpO2 values will be measured and recorded by the observing nurse.
Shotblocker is a flat, horseshoe-shaped device with short, non-sharp 2 mm thick blunt protrusions that connect with the skin, and a hole in the middle to expose the injection site used to reduce pain during subcutaneous or intramuscular injection applications. Before the injection, the observer nurse will fill in the demographic data form, measure the child's heart rate, blood pressure and SpO2 values, and apply the pain and fear assessment scale. In addition, the pain and fear scale will be evaluated by the child and the parent. During the intramuscular injection to be applied to the ventrogluteal region, the level of pain and fear will be examined by using Shot Blocker. 5 minutes after the injection, the pain and fear levels of the children in all groups will be re-evaluated by the child, the mother and the observing nurse. After the procedure, pulse, blood pressure and SpO2 values will be measured and recorded by the observing nurse.
Before the injection, the observer nurse will fill in the demographic data form, measure the child's heart rate, blood pressure and SpO2 values, and apply the pain and fear assessment scale. In addition, the pain and fear scale will be evaluated by the child and the parent. The level of pain and fear will be examined during intramuscular injection into the ventrogluteal region without any intervention. 5 minutes after the injection, the pain and fear level of the children in all groups will be re-evaluated by the child, the mother and the observing nurse. After the procedure, pulse, blood pressure and SpO2 values will be measured and recorded by the observing nurse.