Sathya Krishnan
4 Papers
Sathya Krishnan is an academic researcher. The author has contributed to research in topics: Health informatics & Grounded theory. The author has an hindex of 4, co-authored 4 publications.
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Papers
The effectiveness of virtual reality in managing acute pain and anxiety for medical inpatients: systematic review
Vinayak Smith,Ritesh Rikain Warty,Joel Arun Sursas,Olivia Payne,Amrish Nair,Sathya Krishnan,Fabricio da Silva Costa,Euan M. Wallace,Beverley Vollenhoven +8 more
TL;DR: Available evidence suggests that virtual reality therapy can be applied to facilitate analgesia for acute pain in a variety of inpatient settings, however, its effects are likely to vary by patient population and indication.
A randomised controlled trial to assess the feasibility of utilising virtual reality to facilitate analgesia during external cephalic version
Vinayak Smith,Ritesh Rikain Warty,Ravi Kashyap,Peter Neil,Carol Adriaans,Amrish Nair,Sathya Krishnan,Fabricio da Silva Costa,Fabricio da Silva Costa,Beverley Vollenhoven,Beverley Vollenhoven,Euan M. Wallace +11 more
TL;DR: It is shown that using VR during ECV is feasible and appears safe and the results inform the design of future RCTs.
Defining the clinician’s role in early health technology assessment during medical device innovation – a systematic review
Vinayak Smith,Ritesh Rikain Warty,Amrish Nair,Sathya Krishnan,Joel Arun Sursas,Fabricio da Silva Costa,Fabricio da Silva Costa,Beverley Vollenhoven,Euan M. Wallace +8 more
TL;DR: A systematic review of peer reviewed literature identified the various segments in which clinicians can contribute to EHTA to inform stakeholders and has also proposed an innovation framework.
Maternal and neonatal outcomes associated with COVID-19 infection: A systematic review.
Vinayak Smith,Densearn Seo,Ritesh Rikain Warty,Olivia Payne,Mohamed Salih,Ken Lee Chin,Ken Lee Chin,Richard Ofori-Asenso,Sathya Krishnan,Fabricio da Silva Costa,Fabricio da Silva Costa,Beverley Vollenhoven,Euan M. Wallace +12 more
TL;DR: COVID-19-positive pregnant women present with fewer symptoms than the general population and may be RT-PCR negative despite having signs of viral pneumonia, according to a systematic evaluation of the literature.