The Cochrane database of systematic reviews

Managing pain without medicine during procedures in infants and young children

Updated

Abstract

Fifty-one studies involving 3396 participants were analyzed to evaluate non-pharmacological interventions for infant acute pain.

  • Non-nutritive sucking-related interventions showed the largest improvement in pain reactivity for preterm infants (SMD -0.42) and neonates (SMD -1.45).
  • Kangaroo care was associated with a significant reduction in pain reactivity for preterm infants (SMD -1.12).
  • Swaddling and facilitated tucking demonstrated notable effects on pain reactivity in preterm infants (SMD -0.97).
  • For immediate pain-related regulation, non-nutritive sucking-related interventions also yielded significant improvements (SMD -0.38 for preterm and -0.90 for neonates).
  • Kangaroo care and swaddling/facilitated tucking were associated with reductions in pain-related regulation (SMD -0.77 and -0.75 for preterm, respectively).
  • The presence of significant variability among the studies limits confidence in certain findings.

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Full Text

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