pain intensity (numeric rating scale) (self-report child)
Pain intensity by self-report on an 11-point numeric rating scale (NRS-11) with the anchors of 0 (no pain) and 10 (extremely painful). The higher the score, the higher the pain intensity.
pain intensity (numeric rating scale) (proxy report parent)
Pain intensity of the child on an 11-point numeric rating scale (NRS-11) with the anchors of 0 (no pain) and 10 (extremely painful). The higher the score, the higher the pain intensity.
pain intensity (faces pain scale - revised) (self-report child)
pain intensity by self-report using the Faces Pain Scale-Revised (FPS-R). This revised scale consists of 6 sex-neutral line drawings illustrating an increasing level of pain intensity from the most left face to the most right face.The participant responds by indicating which of the 6 faces corresponds to his or her level of pain. Scores ranges from 0 to 5 (0-1-2-3-4-5), with 5 being the highest possible pain intensity.
pain intensity (faces pain scale - revised) (proxy report parent)
pain intensity of the child using the Faces Pain Scale-Revised (FPS-R). This revised scale consists of 6 sex-neutral line drawings illustrating an increasing level of pain intensity from the most left face to the most right face.The parent responds by indicating which of the 6 faces corresponds to his or her child's level of pain. Scores ranges from 0 to 5 (0-1-2-3-4-5), with 5 being the highest possible pain intensity.
pain-related fear (numeric rating scale) (self-report child)
pain-related fear by self-report on a numeric rating scale (NRS-11) with the anchors of 0 (not scared) and 10 (extremely scared). The higher the score, the higher the pain intensity.
pain-related fear (numeric rating scale) (proxy report parent)
pain-related fear of the child on a numeric rating scale (NRS-11) with the anchors of 0 (not scared) and 10 (extremely scared). The higher the score, the higher the pain intensity.
pain-related fear (children's fear scale) (self-report child)
pain-related fear by self-report using the Children's Fear Scale (CFS). This one-item scale consists of a row of 5 sex-neutral faces varying from a not afraid (neutral) face on the left to a face that shows extreme fear on the right. The participant responds by indicating which of the 5 faces corresponds to his or her level of pain-related fear. Scores range from 0 to 4 (0-1-2-3-4) with 4 being the highest possible fear.
pain-related fear (children's fear scale) (proxy report parent)
pain-related fear of the child using the Children's Fear Scale (CFS). This one-item scale consists of a row of 5 sex-neutral faces varying from a not afraid (neutral) face on the left to a face that shows extreme fear on the right. The parent responds by indicating which of the 5 faces corresponds to his or her child's level of pain-related fear. Scores range from 0 to 4 (0-1-2-3-4) with 4 being the highest possible fear.
self-efficacy (numeric rating scale) (self-report child)
self-efficacy by self-report. All participants will score the same question about how they will deal/dealt with the puncture procedure on a standard 11-point numeric rating scale (NRS-11) from 0 (not good at all) to 10 (extremely good).
self-efficacy (numeric rating scale) (proxy report parent)
self-efficacy of the child. All parents will score the same question about how they think their child will deal/dealt with the puncture procedure on a standard 11-point numeric rating scale (NRS-11) from 0 (not good at all) to 10 (extremely good).
Pain memory bias (numeric rating scale) (parent)
Child pain intensity rated by proxy report by the parent on an 11-point numeric rating scale (NRS-11) reported 1 week post-intervention (T3) minus anticipated pain reported just before intervention (T1), and pain reported 1 week post-intervention (T3) minus experienced pain reported immediately after intervention (T2).
Pain memory bias (faces pain scale - revised) (parent)
Child pain intensity rated by proxy report of the parent on the Faces Pain Scale Revised (FPS-R) reported 1 week post-intervention (T3) minus anticipated pain reported just before intervention (T1), and pain reported 1 week post-intervention (T3) minus experienced pain reported immediately after intervention (T2).
Pain-related fear memory bias (numeric rating scale) (parent)
Child pain-related fear rated by proxy report by the parent on an 11-point numeric rating scale (NRS-11) reported 1 week post-intervention (T3) minus anticipated pain-related fear reported just before intervention (T1), and pain-related fear reported 1 week post-intervention (T3) minus experienced pain-related fear reported immediately after intervention (T2).
Pain-related fear memory bias (children's fear scale) (parent)
Child pain-related fear rated by proxy report by the parent on the Children's Fear Scale (CFS) reported 1 week post-intervention (T3) minus anticipated pain-related fear reported just before intervention (T1), and pain-related fear reported 1 week post-intervention (T3) minus experienced pain-related fear reported immediately after intervention (T2).
Responses to the children's pain experience (parent)
To measure the responses of the parent to their child's pain episodes, a shortened version of the inventory of parent/caregiver responses to the children's pain experience (IRPEDNA) will be used. The original scale is a self-administered questionnaire with three subscales: (1) solicitousness, (2) discouragement, and (3) promotion of well-behaviors and coping. The shortened version will only include subscale 1 and 3. All 10 items of the shortened version reflect actions and behaviors that the parents may enact after seeing the children's pain behaviors. Participating parents rate each item using a five-point response scale (1, never; 2, hardly ever; 3, sometimes; 4, often; 5, always), with final scores ranging from 10 to 50.
Emotions to children's pain experience (parent)
A series of emotion adjectives is used to assess the emotions of the parents in response to the child's painful procedure. All emotion adjectives will be rated on an 11-point scale ranging from 0 (not at all) to 10 (extremely). Four adjectives will be presented (worried, upset, anxious and sad). The mean score of these 4 adjectives will be calculated, whereby higher scores represent higher levels of parental distress.
Waist circumference (child)
Waist circumference of the child in centimeters, measured at umbilical level and at 4 centimeters above the umbilicus.
Body length (child)
Body length of the child in centimeters.
Body weight (child)
Body weight of the child in kilograms, determined with the TANITA MC-780SMA (from Tanita Corporation).
Body fat percentage (child)
Body fat percentage of the child, determined with the TANITA MC-780SMA (from Tanita Corporation).
Fat mass (child)
Fat mass of the child in kilograms, determined with the TANITA MC-780SMA (from Tanita Corporation).
Fat free mass (child)
Fat free mass of the child in kilograms, determined with the TANITA MC-780SMA (from Tanita Corporation).
Muscle mass (child)
Muscle mass of the child in kilograms, determined with the TANITA MC-780SMA (from Tanita Corporation).
Total body water (child)
Total body water of the child in kilograms, determined with the TANITA MC-780SMA (from Tanita Corporation).
Total body water percentage (child)
Total body water percentage of the child, determined with the TANITA MC-780SMA (from Tanita Corporation).
Intracellular water (child)
Intracellular water (ICW) of the child in kilograms, determined with the TANITA MC-780SMA (from Tanita Corporation).
Extracellular water (child)
Extracellular water (ECW) of the child in kilograms, determined with the TANITA MC-780SMA (from Tanita Corporation).
Body mass index (child)
Body mass index of the child in kilograms/m^2, determined with the TANITA MC-780SMA (from Tanita Corporation).
Visceral fat rating (child)
Visceral fat rating of the child on a scale from 1 to 59, determined with the TANITA MC-780SMA (from Tanita Corporation).
Basal metabolic rate (child)
Basal metabolic rate of the child in kcal, determined with the TANITA MC-780SMA (from Tanita Corporation).
Attention control (child)
Attention control is defined as an individual's capacity to choose what they pay attention to and what they ignore. Attention control will be assessed using the Attentional Control Scale for Children (ACS-C), which is a 20 item self-rating scale that assesses abilities to focus and shift attention. Ten statements assess the focusing component of attention (''When I concentrate myself, I do not notice what is happening in the room around me'') and the other ten statements assess the shifting of attentional resources (''When I am doing something, I can easily stop and switch to some other task''). A higher score on this scale indicates a better capacity of attentional control.
Attention bias (child)
Attention bias is defined as a selective attention to threat. All participating children will be asked to complete a dot-probe task, which is a well-investigated reaction time task designed to measure selective attention to threat. In this dot-probe task, a threatening (i.e., pain) and neutral stimulus are presented simultaneously (i.e., a painful child face paired with a neutral child face) at two different spatial locations on a screen for a short time. After the appearance of these stimuli, a dot probe emerges at the location of the threatening/pain stimulus (congruent presentation) or at the location of the neutral stimulus (incongruent presentation). The attentional bias is the response time to incongruent trials minus the response time to congruent trials: a positive index indicates more attention to pain; a negative index indicates attentional avoidance.
Pressure hyperalgesia (child)
Pain response to stimuli that are not normally painful, induced by the lowering of the nociceptor threshold level and assessed by evaluating pressure pain thresholds (PPTs) at the dominant tibialis anterior and trapezius muscle by means of a digital pressure algometer (FPX 50, Wagner Instruments, Greenwich, CT, USA). Per test site, 3 measurements are performed with 30 seconds between each measurement. The measurements take place alternately between the two test sites, the first test site being randomly determined by an independent blinded researcher. The pressure pain threshold in kgf per muscle (test site) is determined by the mean of the 2nd and 3rd measurement.
Duration of procedure
Total duration of the puncture procedure, starting at the point at which the door closes after arrival of each person concerned in the room and ending when the puncture procedure is totally finished (everything is fixated on the body with a bandage)
Satisfaction with the robot-interaction
How much did the child like the game with the robot on a scale from 0 (did not like it at all) to 10 (extremely liked it) (NRS-11). Higher scores indicate more satisfaction with the robot-interaction.
Desire for robot-interaction for future procedures
How much the child would like to have the robot with him/her again during a future similar procedure on a scale from 0 (does not want it at all) to 10 (extremely wants it) (NRS-11). Higher scores indicate a higher desire for robot-interaction during future similar procedures.