Reducing Pain and Anxiety During Dressing Changes After Burn Surgery Using Virtual Reality (BURN-360)
Pain, Postoperative, Trauma, Burns
About this trial
This is an interventional supportive care trial for Pain, Postoperative focused on measuring Virtual Reality, Prospective Randomized Controlled Trial, Decreased drug use, Pain management
Eligibility Criteria
Inclusion Criteria:
- Age ≥ 18
- Patients anticipated to receive only one skin autograft surgery for acute burn injury at RTBC (patients may have received an allograft skin procedure prior to the autograft)
- Patients who will require inpatient stay for at least two consecutive daily dressing changes
- Patients alert and oriented, and able to watch immersive video and respond to questions
Exclusion Criteria:
- Patients on mechanical ventilation
- Patients receiving intravenous sedation
- Patients with significant face, neck or scalp burn wounds
- Patients with confirmed resistant bacteria (MRSA, CPE, VRE)
- Patients with history of significant motion sickness (i.e. occur during exposure to physical, visual and virtual motion, cybersickness, etc.) verbally declared by patient
- Patients unable to communicate
Sites / Locations
- Sunnybrook Research InstituteRecruiting
Arms of the Study
Arm 1
Arm 2
Experimental
No Intervention
VR-360 group (VR-group)
Control Group (standard treatment)
Patients will watch a VR-360 distraction video during dressing change. The patient will be asked or helped to wear the HMD write in full at the onset of a procedure and watch the VR-360 video during the dressing change procedure. When experiencing pain, the patient may indicate the need for further analgesic medication during the procedure, the patient will be asked to push a button in their hand that will trigger a light-based signal for the nurse to provide further analgesic medication. Should their hands both be involved in the burn injury, the patient will indicate the same verbally.
The patients will receive standard treatment and will be instructed to use the same button to indicate their pain.