Anxiety
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Partner-delivered reflexology:
effects on cancer pain and anxiety.
Stephenson NL, Swanson M, Dalton J,
Keefe FJ, Engelke M.
Oncol Nurs Forum. 2007 Jan;34(1):127-32.
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PURPOSE/OBJECTIVES: To compare the
effects of partner-delivered foot reflexology and
usual care plus
attention on patients' perceived pain and anxiety.
DESIGN: The
experimental pretest/post-test design included patient-partner dyads randomly
assigned to an experimental or control group.
SETTING: Four
hospitals in the southeastern United States.
SAMPLE: 42 experimental and
44 control subjects comprised 86 dyads of patients with
metastatic
cancer and their partners, representing 16 different types of cancer; 23% of
patients
had lung cancer, followed by breast, colorectal, and head and
neck cancer and lymphoma. The
subjects had a mean age of 58.3 years,
51% were female, 66% had a high school education or
less, and 58% were
Caucasian, 40% were African American, and 1% were Filipino.
METHODS: The
intervention included a 15- to 30-minute teaching session on foot reflexology to
the partner by a certified reflexologist, an optional 15- to 30-minute
foot reflexology session for
the partner, and a 30-minute,
partner-delivered foot reflexology intervention for the patient. The
control group received a 30-minute reading session from their partners.
MAIN RESEARCH VARIABLES: Pain and anxiety.
FINDINGS: Following
the initial partner-delivered foot reflexology, patients experienced a
significant decrease in pain intensity and anxiety.
CONCLUSIONS: A
nurse reflexologist taught partners how to perform reflexology on patients
with metastatic cancer pain in the hospital, resulting in an immediate
decrease in pain intensity
and anxiety; minimal changes were seen in
the control group, who received usual care plus
attention.
IMPLICATIONS FOR NURSING: Hospitals could have qualified professionals
offer reflexology
as a complementary therapy and teach interested
partners the modality.
Abstract derived from Pubmed
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