The study, set to take place at Gold Coast University Hospital in Australia, will be conducted as a randomized controlled trial. Patients preparing for gynecological cancer surgery will be recruited and randomly assigned to one of two groups: those who will receive standard care plus a virtual reality (VR) intervention, and those who will receive only standard care. Standard care encompasses the usual pre-operative procedures and support provided by the hospital staff. We hypothesize that immersing patients in a preparatory virtual environment that shows them what they are to expect during their upcoming hospital stay for surgery, could help reduce their anxiety levels.
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Anxiety
Timeframe: T0 (before randomization), T1 (same day as T0, but after care as usual +/- VR; usually inside 1 hour), T2 (days/weeks later, before surgical procedure - exact gap is unknown; expected: >3 days, median around 4-7 weeks)