학술논문

Beyond Pills: Acupressure Impact on Self-Rated Pain and Anxiety Scores.
Document Type
Article
Source
Journal of Alternative & Complementary Medicine. May2019, Vol. 25 Issue 5, p517-521. 5p. 2 Charts, 4 Graphs.
Subject
*ANXIETY treatment
*EDUCATION of physicians
*ACUPRESSURE
*ANXIETY
*MEDICAL protocols
*NURSES
*SATISFACTION
*SELF medication
*SELF-evaluation
*STATISTICS
*PAIN management
*DATA analysis
*STATISTICAL significance
*EFFECT sizes (Statistics)
*PAIN measurement
*VISUAL analog scale
*TREATMENT effectiveness
*PRE-tests & post-tests
*RETROSPECTIVE studies
*DESCRIPTIVE statistics
Language
ISSN
1075-5535
Abstract
Objectives: To determine impact of an acupressure protocol on self-rated pain and anxiety scores. Design: Retrospective database analysis of self-rated pain and anxiety scores before and immediately after administration of stress release acupressure protocol. Participants: Participants include hospitalized patients, nurses, and public. Intervention: Involves a 16-point stress release acupressure protocol. Outcome measures: Outcome measures involve pre- and post-treatment self-rated pain scores (0–10) with the Wong-Baker Faces Scale and pre- and post-treatment self-rated anxiety scores (0–10) on a visual analog scale. Results: Five hundred and nineteen acupressure treatments were retrospectively analyzed with pre- and post-treatment self-rated pain and anxiety scores, where 0 represented no pain or anxiety and 10 represented the worst pain and anxiety. Overall, participants demonstrated a two-point decrease in pain scores and a four-point decrease in anxiety scores post-treatment. Hospitalized patients demonstrated a four-point decrease in pain scores and a five-point decrease in anxiety scores post-treatment. Nurses demonstrated a three-point decrease in pain scores and four-point decrease in anxiety scores post-treatment. Public population demonstrated a one-point decrease in pain scores and two-point decrease in anxiety scores post-treatment. Seventy-five percent of participants were highly satisfied with acupressure treatments, and 96% of treatments were administered in less than 30 minutes. Conclusions: Acupressure is a highly satisfactory complementary therapy that can demonstrate a clinically significant decrease in self-rated pain and anxiety scores. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]