Non-pharmacological management of infant and young child procedural pain

No SJR dataJun 14, 2023The Cochrane database of systematic reviews

Managing Pain During Procedures in Babies and Young Children Without Medicine

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Abstract

A total of 138 studies involving 11,058 participants were reviewed, assessing non-pharmacological interventions for infant acute pain.

  • Non-nutritive sucking may reduce pain reactivity and improve immediate pain regulation in both preterm and full-term neonates, based on very low-certainty evidence.
  • Facilitated tucking may significantly reduce pain reactivity and improve immediate pain regulation in preterm neonates, but this is also based on very low-certainty evidence.
  • Swaddling does not likely reduce pain reactivity in preterm neonates, but may improve immediate pain regulation, according to very low-certainty evidence.
  • Structured parent involvement shows little to no effect on reducing pain reactivity or improving pain regulation in older infants.
  • Adverse events related to interventions were infrequently reported, with vomiting and desaturation noted in a couple of cases.

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