96 Decreasing Pain During Dressing Changes in a Trauma Burn Intensive Care Unit Through Virtual Reality
Jamie Rossetto, Debra Eastman, Shannon Brunt, Lori Pelham

TL;DR
This study shows that using virtual reality during dressing changes for burn patients significantly reduces pain and the need for sedation medications.
Contribution
The study demonstrates the effectiveness of virtual reality as a non-pharmacological pain management tool in trauma burn care.
Findings
Virtual reality reduced pain scores greater than 7/10 by 28% during dressing changes.
Use of fentanyl and midazolam decreased by 5% and 25%, respectively, with virtual reality.
Virtual reality improved wound cleaning efficiency and patient satisfaction.
Abstract
Dressing changes, especially for burn patients, can be extremely painful. Literature confirms that the use of pain medications and virtual reality can alleviate pain during these procedures. Traditionally, patients have relied on music and pain medications, but advanced technology has not been widely implemented for distraction and pain management. This evidence-based project aims to reduce pain in adult patients undergoing wound care in the trauma burn center by utilizing virtual reality in comparison to medications and music. A comprehensive literature review was conducted, incorporating eighteen articles based on levels of evidence. The findings suggest that virtual reality reduces pain, decreases the need for pain medication during dressing changes, and enables nurses to clean wounds more effectively in less time. Baseline and post-implementation data were extracted, and staff…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHealth, Medicine and Society · Pain Management and Opioid Use · Simulation-Based Education in Healthcare
