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Complementary therapies in action - education and outcomes

journal contribution
posted on 2001-11-01, 00:00 authored by Patricia Dunning, K James
A study investigated the use of aromatherapy hand and foot massage on 11 patients in a rural rehabilitation setting. An education programme for nurses, carers and family members was developed and implemented. Clinical outcomes - pain, anxiety, joint flexibility and skin condition were evaluated using Likert scales completed before, and after, treatment at three time points and open questions to ascertain patients' feelings about the treatments. Each patient had three treatments, making a total of 33 massages. A significant reduction in pain and anxiety was apparent after all three treatments (p=0.05). Changes in skin condition (softer and more resilient) were highly significant (p=0.01). However, there was no significant change in joint flexibility (p<0.05). The main themes emerging from patients' comments were that aromatherapy massage facilitated communication, allowed emotional release and aided relaxation. Nine people undertook the education programme. They indicated that it covered appropriate information and they felt confident to deliver the aromatherapy massages, but the non-nursing participants would have liked more practice before they entered the clinical setting.

History

Journal

Complementary therapies in nursing and midwifery

Volume

7

Issue

4

Pagination

188 - 195

Publisher

Harcourt Publishers (Elsevier)

Location

San Diego CA

ISSN

1353-6117

eISSN

1873-698X

Language

eng

Notes

Available online 12 March 2002

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2001, Harcourt Publishers (Elsevier)

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