Determines Effect of Virtual Glasses on Pain and Anxiety During IUD Application
Summary
A randomized controlled experimental study registered on ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT07545850) investigates whether using virtual reality glasses during intrauterine device (IUD) application affects pain and anxiety levels in women. The study, registered as of April 22, 2026, tests two hypotheses: that VR during IUD insertion impacts pain levels (H1-a) and anxiety levels (H1-b). This is an observational healthcare research entry documenting study parameters rather than a regulatory action.
“This randomized controlled experimental study aimed to determine the effect of using virtual glasses during IUD application on pain and anxiety.”
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What changed
This entry adds a new clinical trial registration to ClinicalTrials.gov under NIH. The study, titled 'Determination of the Effect of Using Virtual Glasses on Pain and Anxiety During IUD Application,' is a randomized controlled experimental study registered as NCT07545850. The study focuses on women's health and tests virtual reality as an intervention to reduce pain and anxiety during IUD placement. This registry entry does not impose any compliance obligations but documents the study's existence, hypotheses (H1-a: VR affects pain levels; H1-b: VR affects anxiety levels), and intervention type (virtual reality application). Clinical investigators conducting women's health or pain management research may find this relevant for understanding current research activity in VR-assisted gynecological procedures.
Scheduled event
- Date
- 2026-04-22
Archived snapshot
Apr 23, 2026GovPing captured this document from the original source. If the source has since changed or been removed, this is the text as it existed at that time.
Determination of the Effect of Using Virtual Glasses on Pain and Anxiety During IUD Application
N/A NCT07545850 Kind: NA Apr 22, 2026
Abstract
This randomized controlled experimental study aimed to determine the effect of using virtual glasses during IUD application on pain and anxiety.
The hypotheses of the study were determined as follows. H1-a: Using virtual glasses during IUD application affects the level of pain. H1-b: Using virtual glasses during IUD application affects the level of anxiety.
Conditions: Women Health
Interventions: virtual reality application
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