Non-pharmacological management of infant and young child procedural pain

Dec 3, 2015The Cochrane database of systematic reviews

Managing pain during medical procedures in babies and young children without medicine

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Abstract

A total of 63 studies involving 4,905 participants were analyzed to evaluate non-pharmacological interventions for infant pain management.

  • Non-nutritive sucking-related interventions showed the largest improvement in pain reactivity for neonates, with a standardized mean difference (SMD) of -1.20.
  • Swaddling/facilitated tucking also demonstrated significant effects in preterm infants, with an SMD of -0.89 for pain reactivity.
  • Immediate pain regulation was notably improved by non-nutritive sucking in older infants, recording an SMD of -1.34.
  • Rocking/holding interventions yielded an SMD of -0.75 for neonates in terms of immediate pain regulation.
  • Fifty-two out of 63 trials did not report any adverse events, but significant variability in study quality limits confidence in certain findings.

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Full Text

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