CARD (Comfort Ask Relax Distract) for community pharmacy vaccinations in children: Effect on immunization stress-related responses and satisfaction

Author:

Taddio Anna12ORCID,Morrison James3,Gudzak Victoria1,Logeman Charlotte2,McMurtry C. Meghan456,Bucci Lucie M.7ORCID,Shea Christine89,MacDonald Noni E.10,Yang Molly3

Affiliation:

1. Leslie Dan Faculty of Pharmacy, University of Toronto

2. The Hospital for Sick Children, Toronto

3. Wholehealth Pharmacy Partners, Markham

4. Department of Psychology, University of Guelph

5. Pediatric Chronic Pain Program, McMaster Children’s Hospital, Hamilton

6. Children’s Health Research Institute, Guelph, Ontario

7. Bucci-Hepworth Health Services, Pincourt, Quebec

8. Institute of Health Policy, Management and Evaluation, University of Toronto

9. Institute of Health Policy, Management and Evaluation, University of Toronto, Ontario

10. Faculty of Medicine, Dalhousie University, Halifax, Nova Scotia

Abstract

Introduction: CARD (Comfort Ask Relax Distract) is a vaccine delivery program demonstrated to reduce pain, fear and associated immunization stress-related responses (ISRR) in children undergoing vaccinations at school. This study evaluated CARD’s clinical impact when integrated into community pharmacy–based pediatric vaccinations. Methods: This was a before-and-after CARD implementation study in 5 independent pharmacies offering COVID-19 vaccinations to children aged 5-11 years. No changes were made to practices in the “before” phase. CARD interventions were integrated in the “after” phase (e.g., children prepared a coping plan using a checklist, distraction toolkits were placed in waiting and vaccination spaces, vaccinations were performed with privacy, needles were obscured). Children self-reported ISRR, including fear, pain and dizziness during vaccination, and both children and parents/caregivers (herein, parents) compared the child’s experience to their last needle (better, same, worse). In the “after” phase, parents and children reported how much CARD helped (not at all, a little bit, a moderate amount, a lot). Results: The study was conducted between January 16 and March 20, 2022. Altogether, 152 children participated (71 before and 81 after CARD); demographic characteristics did not differ. Children’s self-reported fear was lower after CARD, when assessed continuously (2.5 vs 3.7 out of 10; p = 0.02) or dichotomously, using a cut-off of 0 vs >0 (58% vs 80%; p = 0.01). Pain was lower when assessed dichotomously (<2 vs ≥2; p = 0.03). There was no difference in dizziness. After CARD, children and parents reported more positive experiences compared to the child’s last needle ( p = 0.01, both analyses) and more children and parents reported that distraction and child participation in the process were helpful ( p < 0.001, both analyses). Overall, 92% of children and 91% of parents said CARD helped. Conclusion: CARD reduced children’s fear and improved vaccination experiences for children and parents when integrated in community pharmacy–based vaccinations.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Pharmaceutical Science,Pharmacy

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