Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
8567691 | Applied Nursing Research | 2018 | 12 Pages |
Abstract
Visualization can help patients to manage procedural pain when going through ablation of atrial fibrillation but the effect of an intervention such as visualization cannot be measured by pain intensity because the effect of visualization helps patients to cope with the pain and not to reduce the experience of pain intensity. It was shown that the patients had a feeling of reduced procedure time, although it was not reduced statistically significantly by using visualization. Finally, patients did not feel high anxiety during the procedure which was in line with very low values of anxiety measured in the quantitative study but at the same time the presence of the staff was of great importance to them in providing a feeling of security. A reduction of analgesics as found in the study is not only a matter of safety, it is also important in the patient's perception.
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Authors
Marianne W. Nørgaard, Preben U. Pedersen, Merete Bjerrum,