PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

WebTIPS helps make surgery less scary for children -- and their parents

UCI anesthesiology chair Dr. Zeev Kain says new website provides tailored information to lower anxiety before surgery

2015-04-02
(Press-News.org) Irvine, Calif. -- A newly developed website provides parents and children with individualized information and support -- based on factors like coping style and levels of worry and fear -- to help lower anxiety before outpatient surgery in children, according to a pair of articles in the April issue of Anesthesia & Analgesia.

The papers report on the development of the "Web-based Tailored Intervention Preparation for Surgery" (WebTIPS) project, which provides information and strategies to help children and parents prepare for surgery and anesthesia. A preliminary evaluation suggests that WebTIPS is effective in reducing anxiety levels on the day of surgery. The lead investigator was Zeev N. Kain, MD, MBA, an anesthesiologist and chairman of the Department of Anesthesiology & Perioperative Care at UC Irvine.

WebTIPS Lowers Kids' and Parents' Anxiety before Surgery Developed with funding from the National Institutes of Health (grant R01 HD056104), WebTIPS is an interactive website for parents and children to use in preparing for common outpatient surgical procedures in children. After logging in, parents complete a brief questionnaire regarding characteristics such as their coping style and anxiety level and their child's level of worry and fear. Based on the responses, WebTIPS provides individualized information, reassurance and advice.

The website includes a section that shows children what to expect before, during and after surgery. Features like animations and games familiarize children will happen at the hospital -- for example, a game lets them place an anesthesia mask on cartoon characters.

The evaluation showed that WebTIPS reduced anxiety for both parents and children. For example, on entering the operating room, children's anxiety scores were substantially reduced if they had first been shown what to expect WebTIPS. WebTIPS may also have reduced "emergence delirium," the agitation sometimes seen in children when recovering from anesthesia. Parents rated the WebTIPS site helpful and easy to use.

More and more children are undergoing outpatient surgery, with no overnight hospital stay. Due to time and cost considerations, many young patients receive little or no preparation before their program. Lack of preparation contributes to increased anxiety in children and parents alike.

WebTIPS takes advantage of widespread Internet access to provide individualized, evidence-based information to families getting ready for outpatient pediatric surgery. The authors believe that parents and children were able to "engage repeatedly" with WebTIPS in the days before surgery, increasing its effectiveness.

Kain and his coauthors plan further studies, including evaluation of the website's effects on use of pain medications and pain control after surgery. "WebTIPS has the potential to transform the delivery of behavioral interventions for children and families undergoing surgery, will likely reduce hospital costs, and can reach a broad health care provider and patient base," he said.

INFORMATION:

For a brief video introduction to WebTIPS: http://surgerywebtips.com/about.php UCI feature on WebTIPS: http://news.uci.edu/features/making-surgery-less-scary-for-kids/



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Mitochondria are altered in human cell model of Parkinson's disease

Mitochondria are altered in human cell model of Parkinsons disease
2015-04-02
Based on research in fruit flies, it has long been suspected that the most common mutation linked to both sporadic and familial Parkinson's disease (PD) wreaks its havoc by altering the function of mitochondria in neurons that produce the neurotransmitter dopamine. Using stem cells derived from patients who have PD, scientist at the Buck Institute have confirmed that finding in human cells for the first time. In research published in the April 2nd early online edition of Stem Cell Reports, Buck researchers also provide a valuable tool for testing potential treatments ...

An 'evolutionary relic' of the genome causes cancer

2015-04-02
BOSTON -- Pseudogenes, a sub-class of long non-coding RNA (lncRNA) that developed from the genome's 20,000 protein-coding genes but lost the ability to produce proteins, have long been considered nothing more than genomic "junk." Yet the retention of these 20,000 mysterious remnants during evolution has suggested that they may in fact possess biological functions and contribute to the development of disease. Now, a team led by investigators in the Cancer Research Institute at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center (BIDMC) has provided some of the first evidence that one ...

Researchers create artificial link between unrelated memories

2015-04-02
The ability to learn associations between events is critical for survival, but it has not been clear how different pieces of information stored in memory may be linked together by populations of neurons. In a study published April 2nd in Cell Reports, synchronous activation of distinct neuronal ensembles caused mice to artificially associate the memory of a foot shock with the unrelated memory of exploring a safe environment, triggering an increase in fear-related behavior when the mice were re-exposed to the non-threatening environment. The findings suggest that co-activated ...

Researchers produce iPSC model to better understand genetic lung/liver disease

2015-04-02
(Boston)--Using patient-derived stem cells known as induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSC) to study the genetic lung/liver disease called alpha-1 antitrypsin (AAT) deficiency, researchers have for the first time created a disease signature that may help explain how abnormal protein leads to liver disease. The study, which appears in Stem Cell Reports, also found that liver cells derived from AAT deficient iPSCs are more sensitive to drugs that cause liver toxicity than liver cells derived from normal iPSCs. This finding may ultimately lead to new treatments for the condition. IPSC's ...

Dual therapy's 1-2 punch knocks out drug-resistant lung cancer

2015-04-02
Capitalizing on a rare opportunity to thoroughly analyze a tumor from a lung cancer patient who had developed resistance to targeted drug treatment, UC San Francisco scientists identified a biological escape hatch that explains the resistance, and developed a strategy in mice for shutting it down. In experiments that combined the drug the patient had taken with a second compound that blocks off this newly discovered resistance pathway, the researchers were able to durably wipe out cancer cells in mice implanted with cells from the drug-resistant tumor. "Even in cancers ...

Body's cancer defences hijacked to make pancreatic and lung cancers more aggressive

2015-04-02
CANCER RESEARCH UK scientists have discovered that a vital self-destruct switch in cells is hijacked - making some pancreatic and non small cell lung cancers more aggressive, according to research published in Cancer Cell today (Thursday)*. The team, from the Cancer Research UK Centre at the UCL (University College London) Cancer Institute, found that mutations in the KRAS gene interferes with protective self-destruct switches, known as TRAIL receptors, which usually help to kill potentially cancerous cells. The research, carried out in cancer cells and mice, shows ...

Study finds new genetic clues to pediatric seizure disorders

2015-04-02
Researchers have identified a new genetic mutation at the heart of a severe and potentially deadly seizure disorder found in infants and young children. The finding, which was reported today in the journal American Journal of Human Genetics, may help scientists unravel the complex biological mechanism behind these diseases. "These findings allow us to open up what was, up to this point, a 'black box' and more fully understand the biological pathways associated with these disorders and why some individuals do not respond to treatment," said Alex Paciorkowski, M.D., an ...

Rice U. study: Algae from wastewater solves 2 problems

Rice U. study: Algae from wastewater solves 2 problems
2015-04-02
In one of the first studies to examine the potential for using municipal wastewater as a feedstock for algae-based biofuels, Rice University scientists found they could easily grow high-value strains of oil-rich algae while simultaneously removing more than 90 percent of nitrates and more than 50 percent of phosphorous from wastewater. The findings, which are based on a five-month study at a wastewater treatment facility in Houston, are available online in the journal Algae. "Biofuels were the hot topic in algaculture five years ago, but interest cooled as the algae ...

How to crowdsource the world for emergency medicine

2015-04-02
WASHINGTON --Two new studies, published online Tuesday in Annals of Emergency Medicine, illustrate the power of social media and the Internet to promote scholarly dialogue around the world and the importance of establishing criteria for what constitutes high-quality blogs and podcasts ("Global Emergency Medicine Journal Club: A Social Media Discussion About the ADJUST-PE Trial" and "Emergency Medicine and Critical Care Blogs and Podcasts: Establishing an International Consensus on Quality"). "Our Global Emergency Medicine Journal Club creates a virtual space to allow ...

Circulation of highly pathogenic avian flu in North American birds

2015-04-02
Highly pathogenic avian influenza (HPAI) H5 viruses of Eurasian origin continue to circulate and evolve in North American wild birds. The U.S. Geological Survey and U.S. Department of Agriculture published the genetic analysis of a mixed-origin HPAI H5N1 avian flu virus in the journal Genome Announcements today. This novel virus was discovered in a green-winged teal in Washington State that was sampled at the end of 2014. It is a mixed-origin virus containing genes from the Eurasian HPAI H5N8 and genes from North American low pathogenic avian influenza from wild birds. ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Amphibians bounce-back from Earth’s greatest mass extinction

Better semen quality is linked to men living longer

Enhancing mosquito repellent effectiveness

Prenatal maternal stressors linked to higher blood pressure during first year after birth, study shows

Resistance exercise may be best type for tackling insomnia in older age

Global 130%+ rise in postmenopausal osteoarthritis and associated disability over past 3 decades

OU Health Sciences rises to 102 in national ranking

Bonobos and chimps offer clues to how our early ancestors had sex for social purposes

Lebanon multidimensional crisis diminishing trust in public education and worsening inequality, study shows

Cold atoms on a chip

Rice University study reveals how rising temperatures could lead to population crashes

WVU research reveals adults with disabilities misuse prescription drugs at high rates

Consumers value domestic vanilla -- when informed, research shows

Are higher doses of folic acid in pregnancy safe?

Survey confirms radiation and orthopedic health hazards in cardiac catheterization laboratories are ‘unacceptable’

Study finds consumer devices can be used to assess brain health

Teachers' negative emotions impact engagement of students, new study finds

Researchers see breakthrough with biofuel

White blood cells use brute force to dislodge bacteria

Foundation AI model predicts postoperative risks from clinical notes

Brain functional networks adapt in response to surgery and Botox for facial palsy

Multimodal AI tool supports ecological applications

New University of Minnesota research shows impact of anxiety and apathy on decision-making

Fred Hutch announces 10 recipients of the 2025 Harold M. Weintraub Graduate Student Award

30 million euros for a novel method of monitoring the world's oceans and coastal regions using telecommunications cables

New multicenter study shows: Which treatment helps best with high-risk acute pulmonary embolism

Hidden dangers and myths: What you need to know about HPV and cancer

SNU researchers develop world’s first technology to observe atomic structural changes of nanoparticles in 3D

SNU researchers develop a new synthesis technology of single crystal 2D semiconductors, “Hypotaxy,” to enhance the commercialization of next-generation 2D semiconductors

Graphene production method offers green alternative to mining

[Press-News.org] WebTIPS helps make surgery less scary for children -- and their parents
UCI anesthesiology chair Dr. Zeev Kain says new website provides tailored information to lower anxiety before surgery