Surgery can make anyone anxious, but it is especially hard for young children. Kids going into surgery may be separated from their parents for the first time in a frightening new environment, and they may not understand what鈥檚 happening.
鈥淔or many families and kids, this is one of the most stressful events in their entire lives,鈥 said聽Dr. Sam Rodriguez, an anesthesiologist at the Lucile Packard Children鈥檚 Hospital Stanford.
Panicking before surgery can cause both physical and emotional problems. If children are crying, for example, they鈥檙e sucking air into their stomachs, which increases the risk that they鈥檒l aspirate saliva into their lungs. Anxiety before surgery can also cause in kids, and it鈥檚 been associated with a.
It is dangerous enough that many children are given an anti-anxiety medication before general anesthesia. But medications always carry risks.
鈥淎nytime we can decrease exposure to a medication, especially in a young child who has a developing brain, it鈥檚 preferential to use some of these non-medication techniques to get them off to sleep,鈥 said聽Rodriguez. He wanted to come up with a safer, cheaper and more entertaining alternative.
So Rodriguez and his coworker Dr. Thomas Caruso, also an anesthesiologist at Lucile Packard, began tinkering with various pieces of technology that they purchased online.
鈥淢y wife gets upset because I鈥檓 getting all these packages from camera and tech shops. For a while one of the rooms in our house and whole garage was filled with all these parts,鈥 Rodriguez laughs.
Eventually, they came up with final product: a video unit that they could mount on any hospital bed, that projects an image onto a large infection-compliant screen hooked onto the bed right in front of the patient鈥檚 eyes.
They called it BERT, short for Bedside Entertainment Theater. It looks high-tech, but the whole thing costs about $900 to build. Lucile Packard now has 10 BERT units across the hospital. They鈥檙e using it in surgery, of course, but they鈥檙e also using it to calm kids getting radiation therapy and MRIs.
It is not the only technique Lucile Packard and other hospitals . Some hospitals give kids iPads loaded with games. And there are low-tech approaches, like telling jokes, letting kids decorate their anesthesia masks with stickers, or playing doctor with their stuffed animals. The doctors, nurses and at Lucile Packard use all of them, depending on what the particular patient seems to like.
Today Matthew Husby, 10, gets to try out a BERT unit. Matthew, an articulate redhead with a face full of freckles, has been sick since he was born with a rare genetic disorder that affects his mitochondria. He鈥檚 been under anesthesia dozens of times 鈥 five procedures in the past month alone.
This time, he鈥檚 having a gastronomy tube inserted into his stomach, to help relieve the gas in his struggling digestive tract.
Matthew explains his condition: 鈥淢y colon doesn鈥檛 work. And it has a lot of gas in there that it can鈥檛 get out so it starts hurting. The G-tube is to let the gas out.鈥
He鈥檚 used to the surgical process and says he feels calm and prepared. But even this pro still gets some butterflies right before surgery.
When he was younger, the experience was terrifying. 鈥淚 think it feels really closed in when you have a mask put on you and there are people all around you, and he would shake and cry and scream,鈥 said聽his mother, Cullen Husby.
Rodriguez visits Matthew in his pre-op room, wearing a Spiderman surgical cap, and begins explaining how exactly BERT will work. Matthew is excited to pick his own video out of the many options already programmed into the projector unit, including action, sports, cartoons and music videos.
He picks out an episode of the cartoon show Ninjago. Rodriguez says they had to stop letting kids pick videos off YouTube because too many choices were questionable.
鈥淏elieve it or not, all of the most recent Justin Bieber videos are inappropriate,鈥 said聽Rodriguez.
The moment of separation from parents is the peak time for anxiety, but Husby is completely immersed in the video before being wheeled into surgery. (Heidi de Marco/KHN)
As soon as the video begins, Matthew is completely immersed as Rodriguez unlocks the bed to take him to the operating room. This is often the worst moment for kids 鈥 the moment of separation from their parents 鈥 but Matthew hardly seems to notice as his father kisses him goodbye. Rodriguez 鈥 also a Ninjago fan 鈥 peppers him with questions.
鈥淢atthew, do you have any of the Ninjago characters, toys anything like that?,鈥 he asked, and Matthew answered everything enthusiastically.
In the operating room, Rodriguez and the nurses move Matthew over to the operating bed and quickly move the projector unit as well. The movie is now projected onto the back of a surgical light above Matthew.
Rodriguez switches the movie from Ninjago over to one he鈥檚 designed and edited himself. It鈥檚 a compilation of clips from NASA, Buzz Lightyear and Minions, which together create a full blastoff experience. The idea is for the child to feel like they鈥檙e taking a trip to the moon instead of going under for surgery.
鈥淟et鈥檚 get our space monitors! We鈥檝e got our space masks right now,鈥 said聽Rodriguez excitedly as he placed the anesthesia mask over Matthew鈥檚 face. 鈥淎ll right let鈥檚 get ready for our countdown!鈥
Rodriguez counts down from 19, along with the NASA clip still playing above. 鈥淎ll right let鈥檚 get ready for our blast off! You鈥檙e gonna start feeling the rocket begin to move!鈥
The nurses gather round the bed, shaking it.
鈥淵ou feel it? Can you smell the rocket fuel? Take a deep breath, man.鈥 Matthew鈥檚 eyes begin to flutter as he drifts off to sleep. 鈥淕ood job, buddy. Matthew are you still with us?鈥
No answer. Matthew is asleep and ready for surgery.
Afterwards, his mom looks relieved.
鈥淚 don鈥檛 think he even saw all the machines and everything around him,鈥 she said.
A few hours later, Matthew woke up. He didn鈥檛 feel great but he was still in good spirits. He wanted to make clear that he did not actually believe he was going to the moon.
鈥淏ut it was really fun anyway,鈥 he said. And fun isn鈥檛 a bad way to go into surgery.