The Star Malaysia

Is your child scared of shots?

Here are seven things you can try to tame your chikd’s fear of needles and injections.

- By JOHN MURAWSKI

FOR the second year in a row, the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention is telling doctors not to give patients FluMist, the nasal spray flu vaccine, and that’s a problem for kids and adults who are scared of needles.

Kids’ reactions to shots may range from a mild anxiety to a fullblown meltdown, say paediatric­ians.

How many children experience a fear of injections at some time in their lives? “100%,” said Dr Mike Steiner, the division chief of general paediatric­s and adolescent medicine at UNC Health Care in North Carolina.

“At some age, every kid has a fear of getting a shot,” he said. “It’s basically a universal experience.”

And if the fear is not resolved it can turn into a problem for them as adults, causing them to avoid medical services over fear of injections.

“This may be a good time to deal with, and navigate through, this,” said Dr Ravi Jhaveri, a paediatric infectious disease specialist with UNC Children’s Hospital.

“Needles are a fact of life, whether for a vaccine or a blood test.”

So if you have a kid who runs, faints or puts up their fists at the sight – or thought – of a needle, how do you deal with it?

Here are some suggestion­s from doctors.

● Ask your doctor about a new needle-free vaccine available for children as young as five years old.

The vaccine is administer­ed under high pressure directly through the patient’s skin. In September, it was approved for children age five and up. The most common side effects are tenderness, itching and bruising.

● There are ways to minimise the physical sensation of a hypodermic needle.

Ask your doctor or nurse to use numbing creams, lidocaine patches and ethyl chloride spray.

Another technique is to press the thumb firmly into the child’s arm, producing a temporary soreness that can mask the sensation of the flu shot.

● If your child is truly needle-phobic, talk to your doctor about whether anti-anxiety medication is needed.

● If your child is simply anxious, try distractio­ns: play games, ask questions, tell stories, sing songs, blow bubbles, show a movie or a cellphone video.

Pre-schoolers can be caressed in a parent’s arms and comforted gently.

● Don’t shame or humiliate. Acknowledg­e the fear as genuine and help your child work through it, even if it requires seeing a therapist. Most people do not have an insurmount­able phobia, but many have an instinctiv­e aversion to foreign objects entering the body.

● Don’t lie to your child that the doctor’s visit won’t involve a shot or that the shot will be absolutely painless. Dishonesty and trickery could exacerbate your child’s fear and distrust.

● Don’t be afraid to abandon ship. “I’ve had parents decide not to give it if the child is really fearful or upset at the appointmen­t, but I haven’t ever had to cancel the vaccine if the parents are ok with us trying,” paediatric­ian Dr Sophie Shaikh with Duke Children’s Primary Care in Brier Creek, wrote in an email.

“For something that is recommende­d but considered more optional, such as the flu vaccine, we will take our lead from the parent. We obviously want to avoid traumatisi­ng a child!”

And don’t give up hope. More solutions could be on the way.

Dr Steiner said that at the recent annual conference of the American Academy of Pediatrics, he saw a vendor promoting virtual reality goggles as a tactic to calm jittery kids during shots.

Researcher­s at Georgia Tech are working on a Band-Aid-like patch with dissolvabl­e microneedl­es that deliver the flu vaccine.

The testing is in early stages yet, but a clinical trial at Emory University found the vaccine was just as effective as the traditiona­l needle and syringe, and was well-tolerated by test participan­ts.

One tester told NBC News it was like pressing down on the hard size of Velcro. – The News & Observer/ Tribune News Service

 ?? — TNS ?? Kids’ reactions to shots may range from a mild anxiety to a full-blown meltdown, say paediatric­ians.
— TNS Kids’ reactions to shots may range from a mild anxiety to a full-blown meltdown, say paediatric­ians.

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