VR headsets and hypnosis may help distract patients undergoing medical procedures

New research presented at Euroanaesthesia (the annual meeting of the European Society of Anaesthesiology and Intensive Care [ESAIC) shows that the use of virtual reality glasses or medical hypnosis can alleviate both pain and anxiety in patients undergoing short medical procedures. The study is by anaesthetist Dr. E. Kubra Okur Kavak, paediatrician Dr. Gerlant van Berlaer, and colleagues from the Brussels University Hospital in Belgium.

Patients undergoing short medical procedures benefit from distraction techniques to reduce the need for drugs alleviating pain and anxiety. This new research investigated if medical hypnosis or virtual reality glasses (VR glasses) as an added therapy reduced the need for additional drugs. The procedures involved were any kind of short, usually painful medical procedure outside of the operating theater (such as insertion of an intravenous catheter or stitching/closing wounds).

The study used VR glasses manufactured by OnComfort (who did not sponsor or play any part in the study) with several types of movies and audios available. The VR glasses are worn by the patient during the procedure, providing visual and verbal distraction for the patient using a cartoon movie accompanied by a calming voice. The voice and images provide positive suggestions, similar to medical hypnosis. In those receiving hypnosis, patients were distracted with continuous talking and giving them positive suggestions to make them feel they were in another place and imagining doing something they like to do. Dr. Okur Kavak, who is a certified hypnotist, performed the hypnosis.

In this prospective, randomized, interventional trial, after getting informed consent, 104 patients aged six to 86 years (47% female) undergoing procedures were divided into four age groups: six to 11 years, 12 to 17, 18 to 65 and over 65. Patients were randomly assigned into three arms. All patients received standard care for pain before the procedure; the control group received further standard drugs used for pain and stress as indicated by the Visual Analog Scale (VAS; threshold 3/10) and ComfortScore (threshold 14/30). The other two groups received either medical hypnosis or VR glasses before and during the procedure.

VAS and Comfort were scored continuously monitored during procedures and analyzed with statistical modeling. Patients, parents and healthcare providers scored their satisfaction with the procedures at the end. Regardless of age, pain and comfort scores were similar before and at the start of the procedure (VAS 3.7 to 4.2; Comfort 16 to 16.7), but as of one minute after starting the procedure, both VAS and ComfortScore reduced substantially in both intervention groups compared to the control group, remaining far below the threshold for both pain and stress (see link to graphs below). The results were statistically significant.

There was no advantage of one intervention group over the other, and neither group experienced adverse effects. Patients in the VR group were statistically significantly more likely to be satisfied than in the control group or in the hypnosis group. Age and gender also had no effect on the findings.

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