
Music, video, and therapeutic play helped ease children's post-surgical pain in a nursing review
AI-summarized from the linked source. Educational brief, not medical advice.
Brief summary
A systematic review found that nurse-delivered music, video, and therapeutic play reduced postoperative pain in children having surgery.
What NurseJet pulled from the source
Across eleven studies, music and video therapy reduced postoperative pain in seven studies and therapeutic play helped in five. Laughter therapy and deep breathing each helped in one study, while massage helped in two studies but not a third. The review frames these as additions to, not replacements for, standard pain management.
Why this matters for nurses
Children's postoperative pain is often undertreated, and nurses are positioned to add low-risk comfort measures to pharmacologic pain control. This may matter for nurses because it points to simple, age-appropriate options such as music, video, and play that the review associated with less postoperative pain.
Bedside takeaway
Worth knowing that nurse-delivered music, video, and therapeutic play were each linked to less postoperative pain in children, as additions to prescribed analgesia rather than replacements.
Explain this for my unit
Key takeaways
- Music and video therapy reduced postoperative pain in seven of eleven studies; therapeutic play helped in five.
- Laughter therapy and deep breathing each showed benefit in a single study.
- Massage helped in two studies but not in a third, so the evidence is mixed.
- The authors position these comfort measures alongside, not instead of, analgesia.
Practice implications
- Offer developmentally appropriate distraction such as music, video, or play around painful or anxiety-provoking moments, combine these comfort measures with prescribed analgesia rather than using them alone, and involve caregivers in delivering play and distraction to extend the effect.
Limitations & cautions
- The review included only eleven mostly small studies, and some methods rested on one or two studies. Evidence for storytelling and massage was inconclusive or mixed.
- AI-summarized from the linked source. Review the original article before applying to practice.
Citations
Exact source links
Public citations are filtered to exact credible source pages. Homepage-only or invalid links stay in admin review and are not shown here.
Pain Management Nursing (PubMed)
Pain Management Nursing (PubMed). A Systematic Review of the Effectiveness of Non-Pharmacological Therapies Used by Nurses in Children Undergoing Surgery.
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/38233305/
Professional education only


