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Papers of the Week


Papers: 7 Sep 2024 - 13 Sep 2024


2024 Sep 05


J Pain


39243922

Knowledge and Experience of In-home Virtual Reality for Chronic Pain in Sickle Cell Disease.

Authors

Matthie N, Jenerette C

Abstract

Many adults with sickle cell disease experience chronic, non-vaso-occlusive pain that can benefit from non-pharmacological interventions available for use in the home setting. Virtual reality has been shown to be effective in decreasing pain in chronic pain conditions and may be useful for home-based self-management of chronic pain in sickle cell. However, the literature lacks studies examining this potential. Additionally, the knowledge and experiences of adults with sickle cell who have tried virtual reality for home-based chronic pain management have not yet been reported. This qualitative, descriptive pilot study explored the knowledge and perceptions of virtual reality among adults with sickle cell and their experience with using in-home virtual reality for chronic pain. Nine participants completed demographic questionnaires and an individual interview that was recorded, transcribed verbatim, and analyzed using thematic analysis. Participants were 21 to 38 years of age, and most were female (88.9%) with a medium or high sickle cell disease severity (88.9%) and a chronic pain grade classification of Grade III (high disability-moderately limiting) or Grade IV (high disability-severely limiting) (55.5%). Interview themes, which aligned with the Technology Acceptance Model, were: (1) pain beliefs and self-management; (2) virtual reality as another world; and (3) experience of using in-home virtual reality. Based on preliminary data, virtual reality shows promise as a strategy for non-pharmacological management of chronic pain in adults with sickle cell. However, further investigations are warranted to mitigate the challenges and limitations associated with using virtual reality in this capacity. PERSPECTIVE: Few evidence-based, non-pharmacological interventions exist for chronic pain in adults with sickle cell disease (SCD). This first qualitative, pilot study of in-home VR for chronic pain in adults with SCD suggests that VR interventions need further exploration as a non-pharmacological strategy for mitigating their pain in the home setting.