Despite anatomical correction, people born with oesophageal atresia±tracheoesophageal fistula (OA-TOF) experience lifelong morbidity. Core outcome sets (COSs) are recognised as a means of improving research quality and, as a consequence, improving patient outcomes; one was not available for this population.
The scope of the study was to develop a COS for people born with OA-TOF that would be applicable regardless of age or geographic location.
Patient input was paramount to this study. For long-list generation, in addition to the systematic review (SR), patients and representatives were invited to participate in focus groups, interviews or complete activity packs to ascertain outcomes that matter most to them. International consensus was then sought using a two-step Delphi survey followed by an online consensus meeting.
Eight outcomes were identified through patient events that had not been picked up from SR. 175 people completed the Delphi survey from 26 countries and health care professionals from 13 different disciplines. 24 outcomes met predefined criteria for inclusion and following discussion and voting in the consensus meeting, and 14/24 outcomes were agreed for inclusion in the COS.
14 outcomes have been agreed on to form the COS. 12 of these outcomes are relevant to people of all ages, 1 to paediatric population and 1 to adult cohorts. The COS is, therefore, truly applicable lifelong, which was the scope of the project. This COS will help reduce research heterogeneity, enabling better quality research outcomes and more comparable data.
This study assessed the feasibility of implementing a phase 3 field-based clinical trial protocol to evaluate paediatric praziquantel (PED-PZQ) for the treatment of Schistosoma mansoni infection in children aged 3 months to 6 years in endemic areas of Brazil, focusing on operational aspects such as recruitment logistics, documentation management, investigational product handling and protocol adherence.
Pilot and feasibility study for a phase 3 clinical trial, comprising two components: a randomised, open-label, parallel-group, two-arm trial and a single-arm trial.
Conde, Bahia, Brazil, from December 2024 to January 2025.
Two trials aim to screen 5774 participants from three rural areas in Bahia and three in Sergipe, states in northeastern Brazil, and enrol 403 children eligible for either randomisation or allocation. Trial 1 will randomise (1:1 ratio) 240 children aged 4–6 years into the PED-PZQ treatment arm or the standard praziquantel (PZQ) 1. Trial 2 will enrol 163 children aged 3 months to 3 years, all receiving PED-PZQ. Both trials are open label. Eligible participants shall meet age criteria, test positive for S. mansoni and fulfil other inclusion criteria. In the first recruiting centre, Conde (Bahia), it was estimated that 650 participants would need to be screened for trial 1 and 552 for trial 2, assuming schistosomiasis prevalence of 5% and 4%, respectively. This pilot study reports on the first 60 participants enrolled.
The primary outcome of this pilot study is the feasibility of implementing the research protocol in a real-world field setting, focusing on key aspects such as study documentation challenges, participant safety, investigational medicinal product custody chain and protocol adherence. In addition to providing preliminary data on the parasitological cure rate, secondary outcomes include the prevalence of S. mansoni infection and the reduction in S. mansoni egg count (Kato-Katz method). Furthermore, the occurrence and severity of drug-related adverse events are monitored from drug administration to day 21 post-treatment, alongside changes in renal, hepatic and cardiac functions assessed through biochemical markers.
A total of 60 participants were recruited, and 55 provided stool samples for screening. The pilot phase demonstrated the feasibility of implementing the clinical protocol under field conditions, with successful completion of all planned procedures and minimal protocol deviations. Operational challenges were identified mainly in documentation processes, participant recruitment and investigational product management and were addressed through preventive and corrective quality assurance actions. The experience also highlighted logistical and infrastructural barriers typical of field-based trials in remote endemic areas, which informed adjustments for the subsequent phase 3 study. Preliminary parasitological results indicated an overall S. mansoni prevalence of 9.1% (5/55), with 21% in trial 1 and 2.8% in trial 2. All infected participants met the eligibility criteria, received treatment and completed follow-up. Four achieved a parasitological cure, and one case of treatment failure was observed (trial 1, PZQ group). Two mild adverse events (diarrhoea) were reported, with no serious complications or clinically significant changes in biochemical parameters.
This pilot study demonstrated the feasibility of implementing a field-based phase 3 clinical trial protocol for PED-PZQ in endemic areas of Brazil. The findings confirm that the protocol can be successfully applied in primary care settings, despite operational challenges related to recruitment, logistics and documentation. The study also provided preliminary evidence supporting the safety and effectiveness of the paediatric formulation and highlighted the need to revise prevalence assumptions to improve future screening strategies. Overall, the experience offers valuable insights to guide the large-scale phase 3 trial and supports the incorporation of PED-PZQ into national schistosomiasis control policies.
Brazilian Clinical Trials Registry; RBR-86kcy37.
This study aimed to explore perceptions of the Paediatric Improvement Collaborative’s (PIC’s) Clinical Practice Guidelines (CPGs) among clinicians, with a focus on awareness, frequency of use, applicability and areas for improvement.
Cross-sectional online survey and semi-structured interviews.
Clinicians working in all Australian states and territories. Recruitment was via non-probability convenience sampling. Invitations to participate in the online survey were posted on national- and state-level paediatric organisations, networks and groups. Survey participants could express interest in taking part in a follow-up online interview.
A total of 466 clinicians, including consultants/specialists (46.1%), specialists in training (residents/registrars: 20.4%), nurses (17.8%), allied health professionals (4.7%) and general practitioners (3.6%) participated in the survey. Findings indicated a high level of usage, with two-thirds of participants (63.9%) using the guidelines weekly. Most participants (91.8%) deemed the CPGs highly applicable to their practice settings, and over half (57.9%) had referred to more than 10 different PIC CPGs in the past month. Patterns of use reflected experience, seniority and scope of practice, with utilisation significantly higher among specialists in training, those working in emergency settings and those with less practising experience. Ten clinicians were interviewed to gain deeper insights, reinforcing that PIC CPGs serve multiple purposes, such as to check practice and for self-learning, for teaching more junior staff, and to reinforce treatment decisions with parents and patients. The guidelines were noted as being useful for all members of the multidisciplinary team in providing consistent language and uniform care. Key areas for improvement included enhancing accessibility in time-pressured environments, such as incorporating human factors-based navigation features and standardised layouts, and integrating additional tools and localised referral information.
PIC CPGs are viewed as a source of credible, evidence-based information that was valued across medical, nursing and allied health professionals.
The carbon footprint of end-to-end healthcare deliveries by the National Health Service in England totalled 25.0 megatons of carbon dioxide equivalent (CO2e) in 2019. Optimal and sustainable healthcare can lead to better health outcomes as well as a lower environmental footprint.
To evaluate the potential impact of prevention and effective management of type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) in adults on both the clinical outcomes and greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions in the UK healthcare setting.
We incorporated an environmental module into the existing IQVIA core diabetes model to estimate the impact of improving clinical outcomes on GHG emissions over a lifetime horizon. We assessed two hypothetical scenarios: (1) preventing progression from pre-diabetes to T2DM through diet and exercise versus no intervention and natural disease progression to T2DM; and (2) well-controlled T2DM using interventions with clinical benefit on glycosylated haemoglobin (HbA1c), and renal and cardiovascular outcomes versus uncontrolled T2DM.
Preventing progression to T2DM led to 6.357 additional undiscounted life years and 67% less kg CO2e emissions compared with subsequent natural progression to T2DM for a person with pre-diabetes over a lifetime (emissions of 9586 kg CO2e over 37.115 years vs 28 716 kg CO2e over 30.758 years, respectively). Well-controlled T2DM led to 1.947 additional undiscounted life years and 21% less kg CO2e emissions per patient over a lifetime compared with uncontrolled T2DM (emissions of 14 545 kg CO2e over 22.772 years vs 18 516 kg CO2e over 20.825 years, respectively). In both scenarios, the GHG emission savings were primarily due to reduced emissions related to avoidance of treating complications of T2DM including cardiovascular, renal and eye diseases.
Effective prevention and management of T2DM through implementation of evidence-based clinical guidelines can improve patient outcomes while reducing the healthcare-related environmental impacts.
Healthcare professionals are increasingly burdened by clerical tasks, contributing to reduced job satisfaction, heightened burnout and potential risk for patient safety. Despite ongoing efforts to promote patient-centred care, direct interaction time with patients remains limited, affecting both professional fulfillment and the quality of patient experience. In response, hospitals have begun implementing structured programmes to enhance protected patient time, though their effectiveness remains uncertain. The Geneva University Hospitals (HUG) developed the ‘More Time at Patients’ Side’ (MTP) programme, integrating Lean management and Design Thinking principles to optimise clinical interactions. This study aims to evaluate an MTP booster intervention, designed to reinforce selected programme elements, using a cluster-randomised controlled trial focusing on patient pain management and healthcare professional job satisfaction.
The MTP Booster will be implemented in selected units at HUG across internal medicine, surgery, rehabilitation, palliative care and paediatrics units. Originally launched in 2017, the MTP programme introduced structured medical rounds, delegated clerical tasks and communication tools such as patient whiteboards. The booster intervention follows a stepped-wedge cluster-randomised design, with immediate reactivation in intervention units and delayed implementation in control units. The intervention consists of two key components: (A) a collaborative selection of MTP elements to reinforce, based on their feasibility and perceived usefulness and (B) structured integration of audit and feedback into daily routines, including on-site observations and staff training. The primary outcome is the quality of pain management, measured by the timely administration of analgesia. Secondary outcomes include pain documentation, patient satisfaction, healthcare professional work satisfaction, burnout levels, turnover risk and absenteeism. Other MTP-related audits are suspended during the study to preserve methodological integrity, and concurrent institutional initiatives will be documented as potential confounders.
The trial has a declaration of no objection by Swissethics (2024-00169). All final results will be reported in accordance with the Consolidated Standards of Reporting Trials extended for cluster-randomised trials. We intend to publish the results of this trial in an international peer-reviewed journal, irrespective of the results.
The trial is currently in the pre-results stage and is registered at ClinicalTrials.gov, ID: NCT06491797, 9 July 2024.
The WHO Safe Childbirth Checklist (SCC) has been implemented in diverse settings to improve the quality and safety of intrapartum care, but implementation strategies and their relationship with adoption and fidelity remain heterogeneous and incompletely described.
To describe the landscape of SCC implementation, map the implementation strategies used and explore how these strategies were reported in relation to adoption and fidelity.
We included primary studies reporting SCC implementation in healthcare settings that described at least one implementation strategy, with no restrictions on country or language. Studies that did not report implementation strategies or did not involve SCC use in real-world care settings were excluded.
We searched PubMed, Embase, CINAHL, Global Health and Global Index Medicus (June 2024), screened reference lists and consulted grey literature for the period 2009–2024.
This scoping review followed JBI methodology (Peters et al) and was reported according to Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses Extension for Scoping Reviews. We extracted study characteristics and implementation findings, coded strategies using the Expert Recommendations for Implementing Change (ERIC) taxonomy and grouped them by clusters. Adoption (initial uptake) and fidelity (adherence to core components) were categorised following Proctor’s implementation outcomes. We created a descriptive implementation intensity score and conducted exploratory analyses (tertiles, boxplot).
34 studies described 19 SCC implementation projects across 16 countries. We identified 24 distinct ERIC strategies, with most projects using 5–11 strategies. Frequently reported strategies included educational meetings, audit and feedback, supervision, contextual adaptation and leadership or champions. Exploratory analyses did not show consistent associations between implementation intensity and adoption or fidelity. ‘Change infrastructure’ strategies (such as record system or equipment changes) were variably defined and warrant cautious interpretation. Adaptations (eg, translation and alignment with national guidelines) were common and aimed at improving local fit, but heterogeneous reporting limited cross-study comparability.
SCC implementation has relied on diverse, multicomponent strategies, yet reporting—especially of strategy content and adaptations—remains insufficient, constraining comparison and synthesis across settings. As a pragmatic bundle, implementers may prioritise brief team training, unit-level champions and leadership signals, point-of-care audit and feedback, light-touch SCC adaptation that preserves core content and structured supervision or peer coaching, combined with systematic inclusion of women and families through codesign and companion-mediated prompting. Using theory-informed frameworks (such as Exploration, Preparation, Implementation, and Sustainment and Consolidated Framework for Implementation Research [CFIR]) and standardised reporting tools (eg, Proctor’s outcomes; Template for Intervention Description and Replication / Standards for Reporting Implementation Studies [TIDieR/StaRI]) can make SCC implementation strategies more transparent, comparable and scalable.
Open Science Framework: https://doi.org/10.17605/OSF.IO/RWY27.
There is a global rise in the burden of childhood obesity, increasing the risk of early onset adult obesity. Most developing countries face the double burden of malnutrition; overnutrition as overweight/obesity and undernutrition.
To determine the current burden and determinants of childhood thinness, overweight and obesity using national survey data.
Data from a cross-sectional survey conducted in 2022 were used.
Data from the seventh Demographic Health Survey conducted in Ghana were used.
The participants included 4417 children ≤59 months.
The seventh Ghana Demographic Health Survey in 2022 employed a two-stage stratified cluster sampling design, selecting 618 clusters to create a nationally representative sample. Weight and height were measured using the SECA 874U scale and Shorrboard, respectively. Children’s heights were measured recumbent (24 months). Multivariate logistic regression was used to assess the relationship between thinness and obesity, as well as the independent factors.
The outcome variable was obesity, determined by a WHZ of >+2SD.
The weighted prevalence of overweight/obesity and thinness in children under 5 years is 9.9% and 5.2%, respectively. Children who were overweight or obese had a mean age of 23.11 months, those who were thin or severely thin had a lower mean age of 21.02 months, and those with normal nutritional status were relatively older, with a mean age of 28.41 months. The Upper West, Northeast and Northern regions had the lowest densities of obesity. In the multivariate logistic regression model, children residing in Ashanti, Oti, Northern, North East and Upper East regions had significantly reduced odds of being obese compared with those in the Ahafo region. The average haemoglobin for those overweight/obese was 10.8 g/dL, and 10.7 g/dL for those who were normal and marginally reduced, 10.5 g/dL for those who were thin.
Regional disparities, maternal nutritional status, socioeconomic conditions and unsafe water sources were significant determinants of child nutrition outcomes. These findings call for targeted, multipronged interventions that integrate maternal-child nutrition, safe water, sanitation and regional context.
Implementation of low-intensity, evidence-based psychological interventions can help meet the mental health and psychosocial needs of people with cancer, especially in low-resource settings where there is a dearth of mental health specialists. In this study, we will conduct a feasibility randomised controlled trial (RCT) of the stress management intervention Self-Help Plus, which has been translated and adapted to Vietnamese, vSH+, among people newly diagnosed with breast or gynaecological cancer in Viet Nam.
At six participating hospitals, individuals diagnosed with breast or gynaecologic cancer within the past year will be recruited, consented and randomised into either enhanced usual care (EUC) or EUC plus the vSH+ intervention, which consists of four sessions each lasting approximately 75 min. Quantitative surveys will be administered at three time points: enrolment/baseline (T0), after 6 weeks (T1) and after 4 months (T2). A qualitative evaluation component, which will include in-depth interviews with patients, implementers and healthcare staff and managers, as well as focus group discussions with caregivers, will assess the acceptability and feasibility of the vSH+ intervention.
Ethical reviews for the study were obtained from Boston University, Hanoi University of Public Health (HUPH) and all the participating hospital sites. On completion of data collection and analyses, the research team will prepare and submit abstracts to scientific conferences as well as manuscripts to peer-reviewed journals. We will also conduct dissemination events to report the trial results to relevant stakeholders.
Telerehabilitation (TR) programmes are increasingly recognised for their feasibility and potential benefits, such as eliminating travel time, reducing costs and providing a more comfortable rehabilitation experience at home. However, the comparative efficacy of remote physiotherapy compared with traditional in-person sessions for individuals with Parkinson’s disease (PD) remains uncertain. This study aims to evaluate the effects of TR compared with in-person physiotherapy in individuals with PD, focusing on both motor and non-motor outcomes.
This is a randomised, single-blind clinical trial with a mixed-methods approach. A total of 22 individuals diagnosed with PD will be randomly assigned to one of two groups. The experimental group will receive TR, consisting of remote physiotherapy sessions conducted once a week for 1 hour over a 4-month period. The control group will receive the same interventions in person. Interventions will include global muscle strengthening exercises, balance training, gait and motor coordination exercises, and cognitive training. The primary outcome will be motor function, measured using part III of the Movement Disorder Society–Unified Parkinson’s Disease Rating Scale. Secondary outcomes will include cognition (Montreal Cognitive Assessment), gait (Functional Gait Assessment), mobility (Timed Up and Go Test) and quality of life (Parkinson’s Disease Questionnaire). Data will be analysed using repeated measures analysis of variance to compare outcomes between groups across four assessment points (baseline, midpoint, postintervention and 2 months follow-up). Additionally, a qualitative phase will explore participants’ perceptions and experiences regarding TR and in-person interventions, with assessments carried out 2 months after the completion of the 24-week interventions, through semistructured interviews that will be analysed using Bardin’s Content Analysis technique.
This protocol was approved by the Research Ethics Committee of the Federal University of Rio Grande do Norte (approval number: 5.553.701). All participants will provide written informed consent before inclusion. Results will be disseminated through peer-reviewed publications, scientific conferences and communication with participants and healthcare professionals.
RBR-6h5knrj.
A successful extubation process is critical for the future health outcomes of paediatric patients, as it tests the functioning of the respiratory system without the support of mechanical ventilation. However, extubation can cause stress, pain, anxiety or discomfort in patients, which may sometimes lead to an increased likelihood of reintubation. Music-based interventions and therapies have been shown to be effective in reducing anxiety and stress levels in ventilated patients in the paediatric intensive care unit (PICU), but studies evaluating the effect of music therapy during the extubation process in the PICU are scarce.
This is a pragmatic multicentre randomised clinical trial with two parallel arms. The intervention group will receive standard care + music therapy during the extubation process, and the control group will receive standard care alone. The main outcome measure is heart rate, which will be measured every minute for 5 min pre-extubation, during the extubation process and up to 10 min postextubation. Secondary outcome measures are: oxygen saturation, respiratory rate, blood pressure and heart rate variability. A total of 82 patients will be randomised.
This study was approved by the Research Ethics Committee of the Fundación Universitaria Sanitas (CEIFUS 1356-24, date of approval: 3 May 2024). All parents or legal guardians of patients will sign a written informed consent, and if applicable, assent from participants will be sought. The results will be disseminated through publications in peer-reviewed journals, conferences and presentations at the hospitals’ clinical committees.
Version 1.0, 18 December 2024.
NCT06591533, trial registration date: 10 September 2024.
To evaluate the effectiveness of the recommendation improvement matrix (RIM) methodology for improving the quality of recommendations resulting from sentinel event analysis, where we hypothesise that the use of the RIM methodology leads to better quality recommendations.
A before-and-after analysis of the quality of the formulated recommendations after sentinel event analysis.
The study was carried out during the 2023 Saudi Patient Safety Centre International Patient Safety Conference.
36 conference participants, including nurses, medical doctors, pharmacists, dentists, general practitioners and quality officers.
RIM methodology training during a structured 3-hour workshop.
The primary outcome was the proportion of recommendations that using the 2 test, passed the RIM filter criteria before and after training. Secondary outcomes included changes in recommendation categorisation within the matrix and participant ratings of feasibility and usability on a five-point Likert scale using a t-test for comparison.
Prior to training, 49 recommendations were generated, of which 63.3% met the filter criteria. Post-training, the proportion of recommendations passing the filter increased significantly to 83% (p=0.00543). Adjustments to recommendations primarily improved alignment with the filter criteria, though limited improvements were observed in matrix categorisation. Participants rated the methodology’s feasibility and usability highly, with average scores of 4.39/5 and 4.43/5, respectively. However, 46% expressed a need for additional training, particularly on the matrix application.
The RIM methodology significantly improves the quality of recommendations following sentinel event analyses. To enhance its impact, further training focusing on matrix application is necessary. Incorporating the methodology into healthcare education and professional development could strengthen patient safety practices.
Ambulatory care sensitive conditions (ACSCs) are conditions for which the provision of timely and skilled primary care can reduce risks of hospitalisation when preventing, treating or controlling a disease. For this reason, hospitalisations for ACSC have been commonly employed by health systems as an indicator of effectiveness for the primary level of care. This study aims to evaluate whether the provision of primary care services by physicians with residency training in family medicine is associated with rates of general hospitalisations for ACSCs in the Brazilian Unified Health System network in the city of Belo Horizonte, Brazil.
Longitudinal ecological study using a Generalised Linear Model for Gamma-distributed variables.
Primary healthcare centres in Belo Horizonte, Brazil, from January 2017 to December 2021, aggregated at the primary healthcare centres level.
Data aggregated at the primary healthcare centre level, encompassing socioeconomic, professional and health-related variables.
Incidence rates of hospitalisations for ACSCs, adjusted for age and sex.
After adjusting for age, sex and socioeconomic variables using the Health Vulnerability Index, a higher concentration of family physicians was significantly associated with a lower incidence of hospitalisations for ACSCs. If all physicians in the primary care network were family physicians, compared with a scenario in which none were, an estimated 11.89% reduction in hospitalisations would be expected (95% CI 7.3% to 16.3%, p
The findings suggest that specialisation in family medicine positively impacts health outcomes by reducing hospitalisations for ACSCs. These results can inform the development of evidence-based public policies to enhance primary care effectiveness.
The McMaster Monitoring My Mobility (MacM3) study aims to understand trajectories of mobility decline in later life using multisensor wearable technology. To our knowledge, MacM3 is the first major cohort to combine accelerometry and a Global Positioning System (GPS) to track real-world mobility in community-dwelling older adults.
Between May 2022 and May 2024, MacM3 recruited 1555 community-dwelling older adults (mean age 73.9 years, SD=5.5) from Hamilton and Toronto, Ontario. Of the cohort, 68.4% were female, 62.4% married/partnered, 75.3% had post-secondary education and 62.9% had≥3 comorbidities. Most were Canadian born (69.4%) and white/Caucasian (88.0%), with greater ethnocultural diversity observed at the Toronto site.
At baseline, 56.7% of participants reported no mobility limitations, 15.9% had preclinical limitations and 27.4% had minor mobility limitations. Mean gait speed for the total sample was 1.23 m/s, with a mean Timed Up and Go time of 9.4 s and a 5x sit-to-stand time of 13.0 s. A total of 1301 participants had valid wrist-worn device data, and 1008 participants who agreed to wear the thigh-worn device had valid data (≥7 days with ≥10 hours of wear per day). Step count data (n=1008) revealed a mean of 8437 steps per day (SD=2943), with 5073 steps in the lowest quartile and 12 303 steps in the highest.
Ongoing work aims to develop predictive models of mobility decline by integrating wearable, clinical and environmental data. Pipeline enhancements will enable GPS/inertial measurement unit fusion to explore mobility-environment interactions and support ageing-in-place tools.
Intermittent physiological monitoring and early warning scores (EWS) are limited in their ability to detect deteriorating patients in a timely manner. Wearable physiological sensors allow continuous remote monitoring and may be more timely and accurate in the identification of those at risk, compared with manual collection. This study aims to determine if wearable physiological sensors can be used for the early detection of postoperative deterioration, while being acceptable to patients and healthcare staff.
This is a prospective observational cohort study that will recruit adults undergoing major surgery in Benin, India, Ghana, Guatemala, Mexico, Nigeria, Rwanda and the UK. Participants will wear wearable physiological chest and limb sensors before, during and after surgery for up to 10 days or until discharge. In this ‘shadow-mode’ study, continuous physiological observations collected using the devices will not be made available to clinical teams. No changes in participant care will result. Standard of care clinical data will be collected contemporaneously. Continuous sensor data will be used to design algorithms to predict deterioration and specific complications in this population. Usability and feasibility testing, through focus groups, interviews and questionnaires, will be undertaken with healthcare professionals and people undergoing surgery.
Our stakeholder panel are directly involved in all aspects of this study, which will be conducted in accordance with the principles of the International Conference on Harmonisation Tripartite Guideline for Good Clinical Practice (ICH GCP) in addition to the principles of the ethics committee(s)/Institutional Review Boards (IRBs) who have reviewed and approved this study. Artificial intelligence (AI) prediction models will be reported in accordance with the Transparent Reporting of a multivariable prediction model for Individual Prognosis Or Diagnosis+Artificial Intelligence (TRIPOD+AI) and Developmental and Exploratory Clinical Investigations of DEcision support systems driven by Artificial Intelligence (DECIDE-AI) reporting guidelines frameworks.
Paediatric hospitalisation, encompassing the period from admission to discharge, often involves feelings of pain, fear and anxiety, primarily due to clinical diagnoses and, more significantly, discomfort and stress-inducing procedures. Numerous methodologies and interventions have been investigated and implemented to alleviate these phenomena during paediatric hospitalisation. Virtual reality (VR), for example, has demonstrated efficacy in pain relief for hospitalised children in recent studies. This systematic review, therefore, aims to identify and evaluate the effectiveness of VR in alleviating pain, fear and anxiety in hospitalised children undergoing painful procedures.
This systematic review and meta-analysis will follow the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses for Protocols guidelines. A systematic search will be conducted in March and April 2025 across the following databases, with no restrictions on language or publication year: PubMed, Embase, Scopus, Web of Science, Cumulated Index in Nursing and Allied Health Literature, ClinicalTrials.gov and the Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials. Eligible studies will include randomised and quasi-randomised clinical trials involving children (aged 2–10 years) and adolescents (aged 10–18 years) who received VR interventions during painful procedures. Data will be managed and analysed using Review Manager software (RevMan 5.2.3). In cases of significant heterogeneity (I² > 50%), a random-effects model will be employed to combine studies and calculate the OR with a 95% CI. The methodological quality of the included studies will be assessed using the Cochrane Risk of Bias 2.0 tool, and the certainty of the evidence will be evaluated using the Grading of Recommendations, Assessment, Development and Evaluations framework.
This study will solely review published data; thus, ethical approval is not required. This systematic review is expected to provide subsidies, evidence and insights into the use of VR. It is also anticipated that the results will directly impact the improvement of care for these patients and the qualification of professional care.
CRD42024568297.
This review aims to map oral health plans, programmes and policies worldwide in countries with universal health coverage.
This protocol describes a scoping review that will follow the Joanna Briggs Institute methodology and the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses-Scoping Review checklist, guided by the PCC framework: Population—countries with universal health coverage (78 globally recognised); Concept—oral health plans, programmes and policies; Context—integration into health systems. Searches will be conducted in MEDLINE (PubMed), Scopus, Web of Science, Embase, Health System Evidence and Epistemonikos, with no restrictions on date, language or study type. Grey literature will be accessed through Google Scholar, OpenThesis and the Brazilian Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations. Official documents from ministries of health and international bodies, including the WHO and the International Monetary Fund, will also be reviewed. Two independent reviewers will screen titles and abstracts; a third will resolve disagreements. Eligible records will undergo full-text review. Data will be extracted into predefined categories reflecting health system components: population, structure, services, governance and oral health indicators. Results will be presented using tables, charts and figures to illustrate strategies and innovations.
This review does not involve primary data collection and does not require ethical approval. Results will be disseminated through a peer-reviewed publication and presentations at academic conferences and scientific events.
Open Science Framework (DOI 10.17605/OSF.IO/RCP8N).
Acute pain in the postoperative period of cardiac surgery is mostly treated with opioid analgesics. However, with the risk of adverse reactions and complications, strategies which do not involve opioid analgesics can be considered, such as aromatherapy. This systematic review aims to analyse the effectiveness of aromatherapy in relieving pain in post-cardiac surgery patients.
Two researchers will independently and simultaneously conduct searches and select studies from the following databases: PubMed, Embase, Cumulative Index to Nursing and Allied Health Literature, Latin American and Caribbean Literature on Health Sciences, Scopus, Web of Science, Cochrane (Library) and clinical trial registries (clinicaltrials.com), with no language or publication date restrictions. Randomised and quasi-randomised clinical trials on the use of aromatherapy for pain relief in postcardiac surgery patients will be included. Then, two researchers will independently examine the studies based on inclusion criteria, extract data from the included studies and assess the risk of bias using the Risk of Bias 2 tool and the Risk of Bias in Non-randomized Studies of Interventions tool from Cochrane. Data will be synthesised using Review Manager software. The strength of the evidence will be evaluated using the Grading of Recommendation Assessment, Development and Evaluation approach. The literature search, study selection, review and meta-analysis stages will be conducted from early October 2025 to April 2026.
This study is based on secondary data, and therefore ethical approval from a research ethics committee was not required. The results will be disseminated through publication in a peer-reviewed scientific journal.
CRD42024568532.
Pain is one of the most bothersome symptoms that affects patients with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) but is often inadequately treated. Inadequate pain control in the inpatient setting not only impacts patients’ experience but increases opioid use and hospital length of stay. Opioids are often considered first-line treatment for severe pain but are associated with significant morbidity and mortality in IBD. Non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs are a non-opioid analgesic option, but concerns regarding their contribution to IBD flares have limited their use. Brain-gut behavioural therapies (BGBT), such as cognitive behavioural therapy, meditation and gut-directed hypnotherapy, are effective for pain management and have a role in the treatment of IBD symptoms. However, the use of BGBT in IBD is challenging, given limited access to behavioural health specialists, especially in the inpatient setting. Virtual reality (VR)-directed BGBT programmes can bridge this gap and enhance pain treatment for inpatients with IBD. Therefore, in this study, we aim to establish feasibility and acceptability for a VR-directed BGBT inpatient programme for patients with IBD.
We will recruit 40 patients with IBD who are hospitalised at Michigan Medicine and who endorse IBD-related pain. We will assess patient-reported outcomes (pain rating, IBD-specific symptoms, perceived stress, mood) before and after treatment, cumulative inpatient analgesic requirements and hospital length of stay. Our primary objective will be to establish intervention feasibility defined by the frequency and percentage of enrolled participants that use the VR-directed BGBT inpatient intervention in any capacity. Our secondary objective will be to evaluate intervention acceptability by conducting semistructured interviews with study participants. We will also explore the preliminary effectiveness of VR-directed BGBT on patient-reported outcomes and healthcare utilisation as compared with historic controls.
The study was approved by the institutional review board of the University of Michigan Medical School on 10 October 2023 (HUM00240999). All human subjects will be required to sign an informed consent document prior to study participation. Study findings will be reported through peer-reviewed publication.