Publication: A Randomized Clinical Trial of Caregiver-Delivered Reflexology for Symptom Management During Breast Cancer Treatment: Difference between revisions
Created page with "{{Publication |Title=Publication: A Randomized Clinical Trial of Caregiver-Delivered Reflexology for Symptom Management During Breast Cancer Treatment |Topic=Reflexology |Author=Wyatt G; Sikorskii A; Tesnjak I; Frambes D; Holmstrom A; Luo Z; Victorson D; Tamkus D |Year=2017 |Journal=Journal of Pain and Symptom Management |DOI=https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jpainsymman.2017.07.037 |Authors Abstract=Purpose. The objective of this study was to determine the effects of a home-bas..." |
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|DOI=https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jpainsymman.2017.07.037 | |DOI=https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jpainsymman.2017.07.037 | ||
|Authors Abstract=Purpose. The objective of this study was to determine the effects of a home-based reflexology intervention delivered by a friend/family caregiver compared with attention control on health-related quality of life of women with advanced breast cancer undergoing chemotherapy, targeted and/or hormonal therapy. | |Authors Abstract=Purpose. The objective of this study was to determine the effects of a home-based reflexology intervention delivered by a friend/family caregiver compared with attention control on health-related quality of life of women with advanced breast cancer undergoing chemotherapy, targeted and/or hormonal therapy. | ||
Methods. Patient-caregiver dyads (N = 256) were randomized to four weekly reflexology sessions or attention control. Caregivers in the intervention group were trained in a 30-minute protocol. During the four weeks, both groups had telephone symptom assessments, and intervention group had fidelity assessments. The intervention effects were assessed using linear mixed-effects models at weeks 5 and 11 for symptom severity and interference with daily activities, functioning, social support, quality of patient-caregiver relationship, and satisfaction with life. | Methods. Patient-caregiver dyads (N = 256) were randomized to four weekly reflexology sessions or attention control. Caregivers in the intervention group were trained in a 30-minute protocol. During the four weeks, both groups had telephone symptom assessments, and intervention group had fidelity assessments. The intervention effects were assessed using linear mixed-effects models at weeks 5 and 11 for symptom severity and interference with daily activities, functioning, social support, quality of patient-caregiver relationship, and satisfaction with life. | ||
Results. Significant reductions in average symptom severity (P = 0.02) and interference (P < 0.01) over 11 weeks were found in the reflexology group compared with control, with no group differences in functioning, social support, quality of relationship, or satisfaction with life at weeks 5 and 11. Stronger quality of relationship was associated with lower symptom interference in the entire sample (P = 0.02), but controlling for it did not diminish the effect of intervention on symptoms. Significant reductions in symptom severity in the reflexology group compared with attention control were seen during weeks 2-5 but were reduced at Week 11. | Results. Significant reductions in average symptom severity (P = 0.02) and interference (P < 0.01) over 11 weeks were found in the reflexology group compared with control, with no group differences in functioning, social support, quality of relationship, or satisfaction with life at weeks 5 and 11. Stronger quality of relationship was associated with lower symptom interference in the entire sample (P = 0.02), but controlling for it did not diminish the effect of intervention on symptoms. Significant reductions in symptom severity in the reflexology group compared with attention control were seen during weeks 2-5 but were reduced at Week 11. | ||
Discussion. Efficacy findings of caregiver-delivered reflexology with respect to symptom reduction open a new evidence-based avenue for home-based symptom management. | Discussion. Efficacy findings of caregiver-delivered reflexology with respect to symptom reduction open a new evidence-based avenue for home-based symptom management. | ||
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Latest revision as of 14:28, 26 September 2024
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Title | Publication: A Randomized Clinical Trial of Caregiver-Delivered Reflexology for Symptom Management During Breast Cancer Treatment |
Topic | Reflexology |
Author | Wyatt G, Sikorskii A, Tesnjak I, Frambes D, Holmstrom A, Luo Z, Victorson D, Tamkus D |
Year | 2017 |
Journal | Journal of Pain and Symptom Management |
DOI | https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jpainsymman.2017.07.037 |
Author's Abstract The abstract and the information and conclusions contained therein were written by the authors of the publication.
Purpose. The objective of this study was to determine the effects of a home-based reflexology intervention delivered by a friend/family caregiver compared with attention control on health-related quality of life of women with advanced breast cancer undergoing chemotherapy, targeted and/or hormonal therapy.
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