Can you please complete the following sections given the introduction and topic?:
-Resources required
-Expected outcomes
INTRODUCTION:
Children encounter medical procedures during routine healthcare visits. The most common procedures encountered at annual medical check-ups include vaccinations, finger sticks or venipunctures for blood sampling. Interventions are available to minimize procedural pain in children, more so in the hospital setting. However, in the ambulatory setting such as family care or pediatric offices, strategies to minimize pain or distress with routine procedures as mentioned above are often omitted. While fear or discomfort related to needles is common in children, some develop significant anxiety that can impede preventive healthcare and timely treatment. This anxiety can carry into adulthood and can have a strong impact in public health, 25% of adults have a fear of needles, and 10% avoid seeking health care as a result (Plummer et al., 2025).
In the hospital setting, sedation is commonly used for children to undergo unpleasant or painful procedures with minimal pain and anxiety. Medication is administered to the child to cause a depressed level of consciousness allowing the child to undergo the procedure while maintaining cardiorespiratory function. The Covid-19 pandemic highlighted the challenge of vaccinating children with procedural anxiety. Studies have emphasized the importance of sedation in achieving successful vaccination outcomes in children. One qualitative study reported increased parental satisfaction and empowerment, and increased clinician confidence when mild sedation such as nitrous oxide or oral midazolam was given to pediatric patients undergoing vaccines (Plummer et al., 2025).
However, some parents may not want their child to undertake a pharmacological approach to decrease procedural anxiety. Most research has focused on pharmacological interventions as mentioned above; research on non-pharmacological interventions such as virtual reality (VR) are emerging. VR is proving to be a great intervention in decreasing both procedural anxiety and pain in the pediatric population. The use of VR is supported by the distraction theory and the gate control theory. On a cognitive level, distraction theory describes how immersive and interactive context can compete with pain-related stimuli decreasing the translation of nociceptive input. On a sensory level, gate theory explains that the abundant, non-nociceptive multisensory stimulation from VR can prevent pain signal transmission at the spinal cord, closing the gate to incoming nociceptive impulses (Ciolini et al., 2025).
This quality improvement project will consist of introducing a VR platform based intervention with the intention to decrease procedural anxiety and pain in the pediatric ambulatory setting. The primary objective is to evaluate the effectiveness of a VR platform based intervention on pain intensity in children undergoing outpatient procedures such as blood sampling, and vaccinations.
Selection of Area of Improvement (Luis)
Several pharmacological and non-pharmacological interventions exist to reduce procedural anxiety and pain in children. The Center for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) has published an article called Make Shots Less Stressful for Your Child introducing interventions that parents can do to help minimize procedure anxiety and pain related to vaccinations (n.d.). Similar information is available on the internet. Advancements in technology provide an opportunity to enhance clinicians approaches in reducing procedure anxiety and pain. VR has been used in hospital acute inpatient settings, in children with chronic illness who undergo multiple procedures, and in ambulatory settings for patients undergoing invasive procedures (not relating to routine health care visits) (Bates, 2025; Ciolini et al., 2025; Plummer et al., 2025). This intervention is feasible to be implemented in a variety of pediatric healthcare settings and can help significantly reduce procedural anxiety and pain in children.
This topic is significant as Plummet et al. (2025) and Ciolini etl al. (2025) have documented that this procedural anxiety can transition into adulthood further impacting public health safety. Persistent fear can develop avoidance behaviors from healthcare. It can also increase pain perception during future procedures and decrease the effectiveness of pharmacological interventions.
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