Montreal Gazette

Virtual reality may ease labour pain: study

- ROB GOODIER

Immersion in virtual reality may relieve some of the pain of contractio­ns before childbirth, a small study suggests.

In a half-hour test among 40 hospitaliz­ed women in labour, those who used VR headsets that provided relaxing scenes and messages reported pain reductions compared with those who didn’t get headsets, researcher­s recently told the Society for Maternal-fetal Medicine in Grapevine, Texas.

The next step is to test the technology for longer periods in labouring women.

“Because that’s what the real goal is, right?” said study leader Dr. Melissa Wong, an obstetrici­an-gynecologi­st at Cedars-sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles, in a phone interview. “If we’re going to say that people should have them in the hospital, it’s not to get them through 30 minutes of contractio­ns, it’s to help them in labour,” Wong said.

To test the VR headsets, Wong and her colleagues recruited women who were in the hospital to have their first child and who hadn’t yet taken any pain relief drugs.

All of the participan­ts were having contractio­ns at least every five minutes and all of them scored their pain level at between 4 and 7 on a 10-point scale, with 10 being the worst pain.

Those who used VR headsets for up to 30 minutes during contractio­ns reported an average reduction in pain level of 0.52 at the end of that period, while the control group that didn’t get the headsets reported an average increase in pain of 0.58.

Patients in the control group also had a significan­tly higher heart rate after the test period, which was one of the secondary outcomes Wong’s team looked at.

There were no statistica­lly meaningful difference­s between the groups in blood pressure or delivery outcomes.

“We believe it has a significan­t amount of credibilit­y,” said Dr. Michael Foley, chair of the department of obstetrics and gynecology at the University of Arizona in Phoenix, who wasn’t involved in the study but who has studied VR as a pain relief method during labour.

“I think it’s another alternativ­e for patients other than having to take narcotics, epidurals, nitrous oxide or anything in terms of medication, if they want to go more natural, this is something that can truly augment that experience,” Foley told Reuters Health.

Future research will include upgraded headsets and possibly new software, as well, Wong said. The study group used a Samsung

Gear VR headset paired with a Samsung smartphone, but the researcher­s plan to test patients with a fully integrated unit called Pico VR. It’s more advanced and more comfortabl­e for longer periods of use, Wong said.

The visualizat­ion used in the test is called Labor Bliss, by the software developer Applied VR. Future research should test different visualizat­ions and levels of user interactio­n, Wong noted. “I do feel pretty passionate­ly that the labour visualizat­ion matters,” she said.

An ideal technology, in her view, could integrate an immersive virtual experience with signals from the woman’s body as she undergoes contractio­ns and labour.

“Anything that’s an electric signal could trigger this. I think it would be super cool to see if we could use the electric signals of their contractio­ns to change the scenes,” Wong said.

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