Clinical trials in Los Angeles plan to explore how virtual reality can be used to deal with acute pain through coaching and distraction. Photograph: Tracey Nearmy/AAP |
Clinical trials are using a VR headset to help manage pain during labor
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Martucci had been enjoying the beach vista and gazing at a flock of birds
overhead when something shook her view. The voice of Ralph Anderson, her
gynecologist, broke through the sound of the waterfall next to her.
“We’re
ready to push!” he said, gently taking Martucci’s virtual reality headset off
and bringing her back to a hospital room at Orange Regional Medical Center in
Middletown, New York. Martucci, 40, looked around at her husband and mother,
their voices swirling excitedly around her: “She’s crowning! She’s ready!”
“I was
like, ‘Wait, what are you doing?’. I thought I needed the goggles to push!,”
Martucci says. She had been so engrossed in her virtual beachside hideaway, she
hadn’t realised that her baby’s head was starting to show. It was time to take
off the goggles.
Martucci
is believed to be the first woman to use virtual reality (VR) for pain
management during labor. With more women moving away from scheduled C-sections
– which accounted for 32% of US births in 2015 – VR might offer another
drug-free pain option during birth.
“I was
on a beach, and there was a fire going,” Martucci recalls. “Wherever you moved,
the scene moved with you. If I looked up, I saw the galaxy and the sun setting.
On the right, there was a waterfall and a lot of movement with birds,” Martucci
says. From time to time, a woman with an English accent peppered Martucci’s
virtual world with guidance.
“You
wanted to listen to her,” she says. “I remember her focusing on the breathing
and your body tensing and relaxing, and tensing and relaxing. She kept saying
‘Focus on the birds,’” says Martucci. “It was really very calming. She would
teach me how to breathe and be really in touch with your body.”
‘It made me feel I’m OK here’
Martucci
had declined an epidural earlier in the day when she started to think her labor
contractions were becoming too painful to manage on her own, but she was open
to Anderson’s suggestion to try a pre-programmed VR headset.