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Home ยป #SundayResearchDive: How Safe is XR for Children? A Practical Look at AMXRAโ€™s 2025 Guidelines

via vrforhealth / May 4, 2025

#SundayResearchDive: How Safe is XR for Children? A Practical Look at AMXRAโ€™s 2025 Guidelines

๐Ÿ‘ฉโ€โš•๏ธ Virtual Reality (VR) is already being used in both clinical and educational contexts with young children, particularly for therapeutic distraction, neurodevelopmental interventions and immersive learning. These uses typically occur in supervised, controlled settings, but until now, guidance on safe and developmentally appropriate XR use in children has remained fragmented.

๐Ÿ› ๏ธ Despite this growing body of applied research, hardware manufacturers do not provide official usage guidelines for pediatric or clinical use. As a result, clinicians and researchers have been making careful decisions based on emerging evidence and expert consensus. The American Medical Extended Reality Association (AMXRA), a multidisciplinary group focused on clinical and ethical XR use in healthcare, recently addressed this gap with a comprehensive, age-specific guideline published in J Med XR, a timely and practical contribution to standardizing XR safety in children.

This weekโ€™s #SundayResearchDive reviews the AMXRA guidelines and applies them directly to NutriVRTEA, our VR-based nutritional education pilot for children and adolescents with autism spectrum disorder. The program uses stylized virtual environments and hand-tracked interactions to teach food classification through short, supervised sessions. This comparison provides a concrete example of how to apply emerging XR standards to real-world pediatric research.

๐Ÿง  AMXRA Guidelines โ€“ What They Recommend

๐Ÿ“Œ Article: Marks et al., 2025 โ€“ AMXRA Guidelines on Extended Reality and Children (J Med XR)
๐Ÿ“Œ Developed by a multidisciplinary panel from Yale, Stanford, NHGRI, CHLA, and others
๐Ÿ“Œ Focus: Safe and developmentally appropriate use of XR in children under 18

ย ๐Ÿ“Œ Link: https://www.liebertpub.com/doi/10.1089/jmedxr.2024.0054ย 

๐Ÿ” Key recommendations by age group:

  • Under 6: XR only in research/clinical settings; partial immersion only.
  • 7โ€“12 years: Max 10โ€“15 min per session, no social VR, low sensory load, full adult supervision.
  • 13โ€“17 years: Max 20 min; social VR allowed with safeguards; avoid intense or disturbing content.

๐Ÿ“Œ Across all ages:

  • Use pediatric-appropriate fit (IPD, strap, weight)
  • Avoid joystick locomotion for young users
  • Disable data tracking; ensure GDPR/LOPD-GDD compliance
  • Monitor closely for discomfort, overstimulation, or confusion

โœ… A Practical Contribution: Translating AMXRA Guidelines into a Compliance Checklist

Although the original AMXRA article offers detailed age-based recommendations, it does not present them as a compliance table. To support clinical researchers and developers, we translated the narrative recommendations into a practical, protocol-level compliance tool, and applied it to NutriVRTEA.

Below is the resulting four-column format we propose as a practical tool for protocol evaluation:

  • Column 1: Guideline domain
  • Column 2: AMXRA recommendation
  • Column 3: NutriVRTEA compliance for 7โ€“12 yrs
  • Column 4: NutriVRTEA compliance for 13โ€“17 yrs

๐Ÿงญ The AMXRA document functions primarily as a safety and ethics framework. It does not provide recommendations on clinical outcomes or educational content design, which remain the responsibility of each research team based on their population and objectives.

๐Ÿ“‹ NutriVRTEA vs. AMXRA guidelines โ€“ Full Compliance Checklist

Guideline Domain AMXRA (7โ€“12 yrs) AMXRA (13โ€“17 yrs) NutriVRTEA Implementation Status
Session duration 10โ€“15 min Up to 20 min <10 min of headset use per session>

โœ… Fully aligned
Breaks / pacing Regular breaks encouraged Regular breaks encouraged Structured 30-min sessions with pacing and decompression โœ… Fully aligned
Supervision Close adult supervision with screen visibility Supervision recommended in social contexts All sessions supervised by trained professionals โœ… Fully aligned
Movement boundaries Seated or bounded area Same Standing, bounded play zone with free locomotion in supervised setting โœ… Fully aligned
Interaction type Simple gestures, no joystick Broader input acceptable with oversight Hand tracking only; no controllers or joysticks โœ… Fully aligned
Sensory load Limited sensory engagement Avoid overstimulation Stylized visuals, clear feedback, no excess stimuli โœ… Fully aligned
Content realism Avoid photorealism Photorealism acceptable with caution Symbolic, cartoon-style design โœ… Fully aligned
Social/multiplayer use Not recommended Allowed with safeguards No multiplayer or online functions โœ… Fully aligned
Data collection Disabled Disabled or with explicit consent No headset data collection; pseudonymized local storage โœ… Fully aligned
Privacy & legal compliance GDPR + parental consent GDPR + assent/legal safeguards GDPR + LOPD-GDD compliant protocol โœ… Fully aligned
Psychosocial appropriateness Developmentally safe, no anxiety triggers Promote positive, age-appropriate content Co-designed for TEA; mildly adapted feedback to ensure clarity and engagement โœ… Fully aligned
Headset ergonomics Pediatric IPD, secure fit Same Meta Quest 3 with Elite Strap tested with children โœ… Fully aligned
Adverse effects monitoring Record symptoms (e.g., nausea, fatigue) Same Post-session checklist and observation โœ… Fully aligned

๐Ÿš€ Final Thoughts: From Guidelines to Practice

As XR continues to expand into pediatric clinical and educational settings, ensuring ethical and developmentally appropriate implementation is no longer optional โ€” itโ€™s foundational. The AMXRA guidelines offer a much-needed framework, but their true value lies in how theyโ€™re applied on the ground. By turning recommendations into actionable checklists and aligning real protocols like NutriVRTEA, we contribute to building a safer, more transparent, and replicable foundation for immersive health innovation.

#SundayResearchDive #VRforHealth #Pediatrics #XRethics #Neurodiversity #DigitalHealth #AMXRA #NutriVRTEA #ClinicalResearch

This article was originally published on vrforhealth

Filed Under: Latest News Tagged With: Fitness and Well-Being, Healthcare, Medical, Therapy