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Effect of a Brief Massage on Pain, Anxiety, and Satisfaction With Pain Management in Postoperative Orthopaedic Patients.

Orthopedic nursing
January 1, 2015
Jane Miller et al. (13 authors)
Journal ArticleRandomized Controlled TrialHuman StudyClinical
Study Details

Study Goal

The researchers aimed to evaluate whether a 5-minute hand and arm massage, combined with analgesic administration, improved pain, anxiety, and satisfaction with pain management in postoperative orthopaedic patients.

Results Summary

Pain and anxiety scores decreased in both groups (analgesic alone and analgesic with massage), with no significant differences between treatments. However, patient satisfaction with pain management was significantly higher when massage was added to analgesic administration.

Population

Postoperative orthopaedic inpatients (ages 32–86).

Effective Dosage

5-minute hand and arm massage administered once per pain episode.

Duration

Single 5-minute session per pain episode (two episodes per patient).

Interactions

None mentioned

Extracted Claims (5)
InterventionDirectionEndpointPopulationDosageImpactClaim #
analgesic administration alone
decrease
pain scores
postoperative orthopaedic patients
-
decreased
#1
analgesic administration alone
decrease
anxiety scores
postoperative orthopaedic patients
-
decreased
#2
analgesic administration with massage
decrease
pain scores
postoperative orthopaedic patients
-
decreased
#3
analgesic administration with massage
decrease
anxiety scores
postoperative orthopaedic patients
-
decreased
#4
analgesic administration with massage
increase
patient satisfaction with pain management
postoperative orthopaedic patients
-
significantly increased
#5
Abstract

BACKGROUND: The majority of massage therapy studies have evaluated 20- to 45-minute interventions in nonsurgical patients. Studies are needed to evaluate the effects of a brief massage intervention that would be more clinically feasible for bedside clinicians to administer as an adjunct to pharmacologic pain management in acutely ill surgical patients. PURPOSE: To evaluate the impact of a brief massage intervention in conjunction with analgesic administration on pain, anxiety, and satisfaction with pain management in postoperative orthopaedic inpatients. METHODS: A convenience sample of postoperative orthopaedic patients was studied during two therapeutic pain treatments with an oral analgesic medication. A pretest, posttest, randomized, controlled trial study design, with crossover of subjects, was used to evaluate the effect of a 5-minute hand and arm massage at the time of analgesic administration. Each patient received both treatments (analgesic administration alone [control]; analgesic administration with massage) during two sequential episodes of postoperative pain. Prior to administration of the analgesic medication, participants rated their level of pain and anxiety with valid and reliable tools. Immediately after analgesic administration, a study investigator provided the first, randomly assigned treatment. Pain and anxiety were rated by the participant 5 and 45 minutes after medication administration. Satisfaction with pain management was also rated at the 45-minute time point. Study procedures were repeated for the participant's next requirement for analgesic medication, with the participant receiving the other randomly assigned treatment. Analysis of variance was used to determine whether pain, anxiety, and/or satisfaction with pain management differed between the two treatment groups and/or if treatment order was a significant factor. The level of significance for all tests was set at p < .05. RESULTS: Twenty-five postoperative patients were studied during two sequential episodes of pain, which required analgesic medication administration (N = 25 analgesic alone; N = 25 analgesic with massage). Patient ages ranged from 32 to 86 years (average ±SD = 61.2 ± 11.5 years). Pain and anxiety scores after medication administration decreased in both groups, with no significant differences found between the analgesic alone or analgesic with massage treatments (p > .05). Patient satisfaction with pain management was higher for pain treatment with massage than medication only (F = 6.8, df = 46, p = .012). CONCLUSION: The addition of a 5-minute massage treatment at the time of analgesic administration significantly increased patient satisfaction with pain management.

Medical Subject Headings (MeSH)
AnxietyCross-Over StudiesHumansMassageOrthopedicsPain ManagementPatient SatisfactionPostoperative PeriodTreatment Outcome
Study Links
Quality Scores
SafetyNot Assessed
Efficacy70/10
Quality80/10
Citation Metrics
Total Citations15
Citations/Year1.5
Relative Citation Ratio1.09
NIH Percentile53.4%
Research Impact Scores
APT Score0.50
Weight Score1.70
Normalized Score0.64
Related Supplements
Effect of a Brief Massage on Pain, Anxiety, and Satisfaction... | Panacea Index