Background: Neonates in a neonatal intensive care unit are exposed to a high number of painful procedures. Since repeated and sustained pain can have consequences for the neurological and behaviour-oriented development of the newborn, the greatest attention needs to be paid to systematic pain management in neonatology. Non-pharmacological treatment methods are being increasingly discussed with regard to pain prevention and relief either alone or in combination with pharmacological treatment.
Aims: To identify effective non-pharmacological interventions with regard to procedural pain in neonates.
Methods: A literature search was conducted via the MedLine, CINAHL, Cochrane Library databases and complemented by a handsearch. The literature search covered the period from 1984 to 2004. Data were extracted according to pre-defined criteria by two independent reviewers and methodological quality was assessed.
Results: Thirteen randomised controlled studies and two meta-analyses were taken into consideration with regard to the question of current nursing practice of non-pharmacological pain management methods. The selected interventions were ‘non-nutritive sucking’, ‘music’, ‘swaddling’, ‘positioning’, ‘olfactory and multisensorial stimulation’, ‘kangaroo care’ and ‘maternal touch’. There is evidence that the methods of ‘non-nutritive sucking’, ‘swaddling’ and ‘facilitated tucking’ do have a pain-alleviating effect on neonates.