DOI: 10.1177/00099228261460362 ISSN: 0009-9228

Virtual Reality Education for Hospitalized Pediatric Patients Improves Intrinsic Motivation: A Prospective, Randomized Crossover Study

Faith Collins, Emily Moya, Marcos S. Rojas-Pino, Michelle Zuniga-Hernandez, Faaizah Arshad, Ruth Feng, Ellen Y. Wang, Samuel T. Rodriguez, Christian Jackson, Thomas J. Caruso

Hospitalized children experience educational disruption and reduced motivation during prolonged admissions. Despite the availability of in-hospital schools, many cannot participate due to illness severity or isolation precautions. This pragmatic, randomized crossover trial evaluated whether bedside virtual reality (VR) lessons improve intrinsic motivation among inpatients aged 5 to 25 years unable to attend the hospital school. Participants completed both VR-based educational sessions and standard of care (SOC) conditions on consecutive days. The primary outcome was intrinsic motivation, with secondary outcomes including educational self-efficacy, well-being, self-esteem, and parental experience. Of 156 enrolled patients, 100 were analyzed (mean age 11.5 [SD = 4.1 years]; 43.9% female). Intrinsic motivation scores were higher in the VR condition than SOC ( P = .0048), and parental satisfaction was also greater ( P = .0008). Bedside VR education represents a feasible, acceptable, and scalable adjunct to inpatient learning, supporting intrinsic motivation and caregiver satisfaction during hospitalization.

Trial Registration: ClinicalTrials.gov NCT05725395, date first registered November 22, 2022.

More from our Archive