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Young children experience little emotional burden during invasive procedures in asthma research.


ABSTRACT: Research in children should strike the right balance between protecting underage study subjects and advancing the medical field. This study gives insight into the emotional burden that common invasive research procedures in asthma research have on young children, both from the child and parent perspective. Puppetry was used to stimulate children (age 5-6 years) to explain their emotional burden prior to and after the research procedures. We operationalised emotional burden as willingness to participate in future research and reluctance towards participation. Parents filled out a questionnaire on this topic. Symptomatic patients as well as healthy controls were analysed. Forty-one children were included. Children's anticipatory fear for future research showed a clear decrease of 0.7?±?1.6 on a 5-point Likert scale as a consequence of participation (p?=?0.02). Sixty percent of all participating children explicitly indicated willingness to undergo identical research procedures again. Children uninformed by their parents about the venipuncture were significantly more reluctant to the venipuncture after the procedure (p?

SUBMITTER: Padding AM 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC6339656 | biostudies-other | 2019 Feb

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-other

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Young children experience little emotional burden during invasive procedures in asthma research.

Padding Anne M AM   Rutjes Niels W NW   Hashimoto Simone S   Vos Amit A   Staphorst Mira S MS   van Aalderen Wim M C WMC   van der Schee Marc P MP  

European journal of pediatrics 20181103 2


Research in children should strike the right balance between protecting underage study subjects and advancing the medical field. This study gives insight into the emotional burden that common invasive research procedures in asthma research have on young children, both from the child and parent perspective. Puppetry was used to stimulate children (age 5-6 years) to explain their emotional burden prior to and after the research procedures. We operationalised emotional burden as willingness to part  ...[more]

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