Virtual reality used to distract children and young people with long‐term conditions from pain or pruritus: A scoping review using PAGER

Author:

Singleton Heidi1ORCID,Mahato Preeti1,Arden‐Close Emily1,Thomas Sarah1,Ersser Steven1ORCID,Holley Debbie1,Yang Xiaosong1,Roberts Amanda2

Affiliation:

1. Bournemouth University Bournemouth UK

2. Nottingham Support for Carers of Children with Eczema Nottingham UK

Abstract

AbstractAims and ObjectivesTo map out the primary research studies relating to how virtual reality (VR) has been used to distract children and young people with long‐term conditions from pain or pruritus.BackgroundPharmacologic treatment of chronic pain and pruritus may have side effects; hence, non‐invasive non‐pharmacological treatments are being sought.DesignThe scoping review followed the methodology recommended by the Joanna Briggs Institute, PAGER framework and PRISMA‐ScR checklist. The protocol was registered with the Open Science Registration on 14 February 2022 https//doi.org/10.17605/OSF.IO/K2R93.MethodsFive databases (Medline, CINAHL, PsycINFO, Web of Science and Scopus) were searched. Data were extracted from primary research studies published between 2000 and 2022 involving children and adolescent populations (<21 years) with a long‐term condition that had an element of enduring pruritus and/or pain.ResultsOf 464 abstracts screened, 35 full‐text papers were assessed with 5 studies meeting the eligibility criteria. Three main themes emerged from the included studies: (1) Improvements in pain and daily functioning; (2) positive perceptions of VR and (3) accessibility and feasibility of VR. No papers were found on the effect of VR on alleviating pruritus.ConclusionVR is feasible, acceptable, and safe for children and adolescents with chronic pain in a range of long‐term conditions and offers promise as an adjunctive treatment for improving chronic pain and quality of life. No studies were identified that targeted pruritis or measured pruritis outcomes; thus, the effects of VR for pruritis are unknown. There is a need for rigorously designed, randomised controlled trials to test the clinical and cost‐effectiveness of VR interventions for chronic pain and pruritis in children and adolescents. The use of the PAGER (Patterns, Advances, Gaps, Evidence for Practice and Research Recommendations) framework for scoping reviews helped to structure analysis and findings and identify research gaps.Relevance to Clinical PracticeVR interventions offer promise in improving chronic pain related to long‐term conditions.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

General Medicine,General Nursing

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