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A self-administered moxibustion-cum-massage intervention for older adults with chronic pain in the community: A randomized controlled trial.

Complementary therapies in medicine
March 1, 2023
Margaret X C Yin et al. (8 authors)
Randomized Controlled TrialJournal ArticleHuman StudyClinical
Study Details

Study Goal

To determine the effectiveness of a self-administrable moxibustion-cum-massage intervention for relieving chronic pain and improving psychological well-being in older adults.

Results Summary

The intervention significantly improved subjective well-being, reduced pain levels (small effect size), and enhanced sleep quality and depression (large effect sizes) immediately post-intervention, but maintenance effects were not significant at follow-up. The control group showed no significant changes.

Population

Older adults (78 participants) with chronic pain in a community setting.

Effective Dosage

Two moxa sticks per day for five consecutive days.

Duration

Five days.

Interactions

None mentioned.

Extracted Claims (6)
InterventionDirectionEndpointPopulationDosageImpactClaim #
moxibustion-cum-massage intervention
decrease
subjective pain level
older adults in the community
small effect size
significantly reduced
#1
moxibustion-cum-massage intervention
increase
sleep quality
older adults in the community
large effect size
significantly improved
#2
moxibustion-cum-massage intervention
increase
depression
older adults in the community
large effect size
significantly improved
#3
moxibustion-cum-massage intervention
increase
subjective well-being
older adults in the community
medium effect size
showed a significant group × time interaction effect
#4
moxibustion-cum-massage intervention
no change
pain level, sleep quality, depression, subjective well-being
older adults in the community
not significant
maintenance effects were not significant
#5
waitlist control
no change
pain level, sleep quality, depression, subjective well-being
older adults in the community
no significant change
showed no significant within-group effects
#6
Abstract

OBJECTIVES: To determine the effectiveness of a simple, self-administrable moxibustion-cum-massage intervention for relieving chronic pain and improving psychological well-being for older adults in the community. DESIGN: A randomized controlled trial. SETTING: Seventy-eight participants with chronic pain were randomly assigned to the intervention and waitlist control groups. INTERVENTIONS: Participants received two moxa sticks a day to use the moxibustion-cum-massage procedure with the help of trained volunteers or caregivers for five consecutive days. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Participates' pain level, sleep quality, depression and subjective well-being were measured before the intervention (T0), immediately after the intervention (T1), and one week after the intervention (T2). RESULTS: Repeated measures ANOVA revealed a significant group × time interaction effect in subjective well-being with a medium effect size. Regarding within-group effects in the intervention group at post-intervention (T1), the subjective pain level was significantly reduced with a small effect size, while sleep quality and depression significantly improved with large effect sizes. The control group showed no significant within-group effects in these variables. Maintenance effects at follow-up (T2) were not significant. CONCLUSION: Despite the short intervention timeframe of five days, the study revealed preliminary evidence that the moxibustion-cum-massage intervention can be an effective, self-administrable pain relief regime for older adults. A longer period of intervention time is suggested for future studies.

Medical Subject Headings (MeSH)
HumansAgedChronic PainMoxibustionResearch DesignMassage
Study Links
Quality Scores
SafetyNot Assessed
Efficacy75/10
Quality80/10
Citation Metrics
Total Citations2
Citations/Year1.0
Relative Citation Ratio0.65
NIH Percentile34.7%
Research Impact Scores
APT Score0.50
Weight Score2.53
Normalized Score0.66
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