See our YouTube 'intervention' video we are using in our pre-post YouTube study
Denise Harrison, University of Ottawa
4 July 2014
Following our systematic review of YouTube, the CHEO (Ottawa, Canada) and University of Ottawa research team produced and posted our own YouTube video showing evidence-based pain management strategies for infants during immunization. Following a 12-month period, we will conduct a follow-up review of posted YouTube videos showing infants being immunized to ascertain the impact of our YouTube video. See http://tinyurl.com/BSweet2Babies
Competing interests
First author of published paper: Too many crying babies: a systematic review of pain managment practices during immunizations on YouTube.
See our YouTube 'intervention' video we are using in our pre-post YouTube study
4 July 2014
Following our systematic review of YouTube, the CHEO (Ottawa, Canada) and University of Ottawa research team produced and posted our own YouTube video showing evidence-based pain management strategies for infants during immunization. Following a 12-month period, we will conduct a follow-up review of posted YouTube videos showing infants being immunized to ascertain the impact of our YouTube video. See http://tinyurl.com/BSweet2BabiesCompeting interests
First author of published paper: Too many crying babies: a systematic review of pain managment practices during immunizations on YouTube.