For children an iPad before surgery could be as effective as a sedative
The use of mobile devices by parents to keep their kids
occupied is fairly well established, but a new study indicates that those
devices' calming effect may even be useful for surgeries.
A new study being published by the World Federation Of Societies of Anaesthesiologists (WFSA) claims that giving a child an iPad to
use before surgery can be as relaxing as a sedative.
The study showed that child and parental anxiety before
anaesthesia are equally blunted by midazolam or use of the iPad. However, the
quality of induction of anaesthesia, as well as parental satisfaction, were
judged better in the iPad group. Use of iPads or other tablet devices is a
non-pharmacologic tool which can reduce perioperative stress without any
sedative effect in paediatric ambulatory surgery.
The findings, which tested over 100 children using a mix of
iPads and midazolam (a widely used sedative), was conducted at the Hopital MereEnfant, Hospices Civils de Lyon in France.
Of course, using such a small number of research subjects
means the study's results aren't necessarily a guarantee that tablets are a
pre-surgery cure-all for paediatric anxiety.
Nevertheless, it offers another data point which indicates
that giving children tablets to mitigate stressful situations may have more
positive effects than not.
The study's findings are set to be presented at this week's World Congress of Anaesthesiologists event being held in Hong Kong.
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