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Erschienen in: Journal of Radiation Oncology 3/2017

22.03.2017 | Original Research

A pilot study to determine if the use of a virtual reality education module reduces anxiety and increases comprehension in patients receiving radiation therapy

verfasst von: Matthew Marquess, Shirley Pinegar Johnston, Noelle L. Williams, Carolyn Giordano, Benjamin E. Leiby, Mark D. Hurwitz, Adam P. Dicker, Robert B. Den

Erschienen in: Journal of Radiation Oncology | Ausgabe 3/2017

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Abstract

Objectives

Pre-treatment patient education has been shown to decrease anxiety and enhance comprehension. Our pilot study evaluates the impact of VERT™, a virtual environment education tool, on these endpoints.

Methods

Twenty-two patients with prostate cancer being treated with radiotherapy completed a 16-question comprehension/anxiety survey. Patients proceeded to VERT™, modeled after a flight simulator using realistic sounds and views. The test was then repeated. A power analysis determined that enrolling 20 patients achieves 80% power to detect an effect size of 0.89 with a Bonferroni-adjusted significance level of 0.003125 using a one-sided one-sample paired t test to analyze differences between individual pre/post-test scores. Descriptive statistics were reported and effect size was computed.

Results

Pre/post-test measures for all questions were statistically significant, favoring our hypothesis of improved education and reduced anxiety following virtual simulation except three measures of anxiety (low in both assessments). Baseline anxiety was highest for treatment precision, which also demonstrated the most significant pre/post-intervention improvement.

Conclusion

Decreased anxiety and improved comprehension influence patient-reported satisfaction and can contribute to quality assurance. Implementation of virtual simulation was successful in improving comprehension and reducing anxiety. Development of personalized, site-specific, clinic-based virtual modules is a long-term goal of this pilot study.
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Metadaten
Titel
A pilot study to determine if the use of a virtual reality education module reduces anxiety and increases comprehension in patients receiving radiation therapy
verfasst von
Matthew Marquess
Shirley Pinegar Johnston
Noelle L. Williams
Carolyn Giordano
Benjamin E. Leiby
Mark D. Hurwitz
Adam P. Dicker
Robert B. Den
Publikationsdatum
22.03.2017
Verlag
Springer Berlin Heidelberg
Erschienen in
Journal of Radiation Oncology / Ausgabe 3/2017
Print ISSN: 1948-7894
Elektronische ISSN: 1948-7908
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s13566-017-0298-3

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