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The effects of guided imagery and hand massage on wellbeing and pain in palliative care: Evaluation of a pilot study.

Complementary therapies in clinical practice
February 1, 2021
Miranda Corpora et al. (3 authors)
Journal ArticleHuman Study
Study Details

Study Goal

The researchers aimed to measure the effect of guided imagery and hand massage on self-rated wellbeing and pain in palliative care patients.

Results Summary

The intervention led to statistically significant improvements in self-reported wellbeing (p = .029) and pain (p = .001), with participants finding it helpful and relaxing.

Population

Adult palliative care patients (n = 20).

Effective Dosage

One session of guided imagery and hand massage.

Duration

Single session (duration not specified).

Interactions

None mentioned

Extracted Claims (4)
InterventionDirectionEndpointPopulationDosageImpactClaim #
guided imagery and hand massage
increase
self-reported levels of wellbeing
adult palliative care patients
-
elicited a statistically significant improvement
#1
guided imagery and hand massage
decrease
self-reported levels of pain
adult palliative care patients
-
elicited a statistically significant improvement
#2
guided imagery and hand massage
increase
wellbeing
palliative care patients
-
had an immediate positive effect
#3
guided imagery and hand massage
decrease
pain
palliative care patients
-
had an immediate positive effect
#4
Abstract

BACKGROUND: This study aims to measure the effect of guided imagery and hand massage on self-rated wellbeing and pain for palliative care patients. METHODS: This study adopted a quasi-experimental one-group pre-test post-test design. The sample consisted of n = 20 adult palliative care patients who received one session of guided imagery and hand massage. Self-reported levels of wellbeing and pain were measured on a scale of 0-10 before and after the intervention. Results were analyzed using a one-tailed sign test in SPSS Software. RESULTS: The intervention elicited a statistically significant improvement in self-reported levels of wellbeing (p = .029) and pain (p = .001). Feedback from participants showed the intervention was helpful and relaxing. CONCLUSION: The intervention had an immediate positive effect on wellbeing and pain among palliative care patients. Considering the promising results of this pilot study, guided imagery and hand massage should be studied further in the palliative care setting.

Medical Subject Headings (MeSH)
HumansImagery, PsychotherapyMassagePainPalliative CarePilot ProjectsTreatment Outcome
Study Links
Quality Scores
SafetyNot Assessed
Efficacy85/10
Quality65/10
Citation Metrics
Total Citations2
Citations/Year0.5
Relative Citation Ratio0.39
NIH Percentile20.8%
Research Impact Scores
APT Score0.25
Weight Score1.96
Normalized Score0.67
Related Supplements
The effects of guided imagery and hand massage on wellbeing ... | Panacea Index