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Medicine Entertainment Games

VR Snow Game Functions As Pain Management 27

eldavojohn writes "Burn victims — especially soldiers from war — have been proven to deal with therapy and pain better when immersed in a calm, cold virtual world. The game Snow World lets players hit targets with snowballs in a winter wonderland. The results of the study show unarguably that victims handle treatment and healing much better when their mind, eyes & ears are occupied — mind over matter, indeed."
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VR Snow Game Functions As Pain Management

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  • Snow necessary? (Score:5, Interesting)

    by s.bots ( 1099921 ) on Friday November 14, 2008 @09:32PM (#25768015)

    I wonder if the snowy setting really makes that much of a difference, or if the main thing is that the mind is occupied with something other than pain. No mention in TFA of other test VR games.

    • by JeanBaptiste ( 537955 ) on Friday November 14, 2008 @09:37PM (#25768037)

      I would think a calm peaceful setting would be better than fighting Onyxia in Molten Core

      • Re: (Score:1, Offtopic)

        So Fight Club [youtube.com] was right all along? I can't wait until all the Iraq war veterans get together and stick it to the man before they demolish the credit system.
      • Re: (Score:2, Funny)

        by Gerafix ( 1028986 )
        I think you mean Ragnaros as Onyxia is in her lair in Dustwallow Marsh, not the Molten Core. /Pedantic What they didn't know about this study though is how it makes them extremely violent. I met one of the participants and we talked for a while. We were walking down Polar Bear Lane and he started smashing all the snow men on top of peoples igloos (I'm Canadian). He said it was because of Snow World.
    • Re:Snow necessary? (Score:4, Informative)

      by TubeSteak ( 669689 ) on Friday November 14, 2008 @10:37PM (#25768283) Journal

      I wonder if the snowy setting really makes that much of a difference, or if the main thing is that the mind is occupied with something other than pain. No mention in TFA of other test VR games.

      http://www.chsd.org/11490.cfm [chsd.org]

      When [lead researcher Dr. Anu Patel] began her study on 4- to 12-year-olds in February, she thought Game Boy might reduce anxiety as much as a standard tranquilizer, midazolam, often given before surgery. But the video game worked better _ a bonus, she said, because many parents oppose tranquilizing their children.

    • Re: (Score:2, Offtopic)

      by flyingsquid ( 813711 )
      All I can say is, I've been way, WAY into politics as of late, because I thought for a second this said, 'VR Snow Game Functions as Palin Management'...

      "I know it's pretty extreme, John, but she's become a danger to the party. The only way we can keep her under control is to immerse her in this virtual Alaska. Now she spends six, eight hours a day in there, snowshoeing, chasing after moose, shooting polar bears, clubbing seals. She's been much more calm and manageable since we started using the simulation.

  • Ok, I realize that "mind over matter" is just a trivial cliche at this point and that tossing in trivial cliches is an accepted writing strategy. That said, it is pointless to the point of misleading in this context. "Mind focusing on stuff that isn't OHGODTHEPAIN over mind focusing on OHGODTHEPAIN" is more like it. There isn't some magic Cartesian mind out there, twiddling your atoms if you play the right video games. Experiencing pain is something the brain does, playing video games is also something it d
  • Healthy Gaming (Score:1, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward

    More news on health and exercise related video games here:

    http://www.healthygaming.com/blog/ [healthygaming.com]

  • When you convince the brain that it is in a cold environment, it adjusts the bodily response, right down to the genetic level. The response to a cold environment will definitly aid the healing process.

    • by icegreentea ( 974342 ) on Friday November 14, 2008 @10:48PM (#25768313)
      It's not just that. It's something to focus on. I've recently spent 6 weeks in a below knee cast (broken ankle). When the itch just got unbearable, I would go play the piano, or whip out my cellphone and go play Tetris. Just by doing something that required my focus and attention let me ignore the itch long enough till it went away. Similarly (ironically in a way?) you can have the same approach to dealing with really cold stuff (like ice bathing your ankle). If you have something that you're familiar with and can get your mind into, getting over the initial painful stage (before the numbing kicks in) of an ice bath (or just general icing) becomes so much easier.
      • by PolygamousRanchKid ( 1290638 ) on Saturday November 15, 2008 @04:43AM (#25769515)

        When I was 6 years old, I jumped out of a tree-house into a pile of leaves, and broke my ankle, and had that same type of cast. The doctor told my mother and I horror stories about a patient who tried to relieve the itching with a coat hanger, and ended up with 50 stitches. He made it a walking-cast, and told my mother to let me go out and play, and then I would forget about any itching.

        So my mother let me out, looked out the window, and couldn't see me. She called for me, and I answered, "I'm up here, Mom!"

        Yes, I had climbed yet another tree. With my leg in a cast.

        I still don't know why Darwin hasn't got me yet.

  • Time warp? (Score:2, Interesting)

    by Centurion5 ( 1180605 )
    Must be a slow news cycle. "Snow World" and its use in burn therapy was covered in WIRED over 7 years ago? See: http://www.wired.com/science/discoveries/news/2001/03/42084 [wired.com]
  • Can you write your name with virtual pee in the snow? Because if you can't, it will not be hard to distinguish it from real world, thus negating immersion.
  • God help those poor soldiers when the games start to crash. (:

  • Isn't that just "mind over mind"?

  • Unfortunately, these researchers don't seem to understand that videogame studies are only going to draw attention if they blame video games for something horrible. "Video Games Help Soldiers Cope With Pain"? That won't do at all!

    Hmmm...

    Parents are being warned about the desensitizing effects of a new video game that one observer described as "a snowball massacre from hell." Chillingly, the game is already popular among trained killers.

    There we go. Much better!

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