Non-pharmacological interventions feasible in the nursing scope of practice for pain relief in palliative care patients: a systematic review

IF 2.7 Q2 HEALTH CARE SCIENCES & SERVICES Palliative Care and Social Practice Pub Date : 2024-01-10 DOI:10.1177/26323524231222496
Suzan van Veen, H. Drenth, H. Hobbelen, Evelyn Finnema, Saskia Teunissen, Everlien de Graaf
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Abstract

Background: Palliative care patients desire more symptom management interventions that are complementary to their medical treatment. Within the multi-professional team, nurses could help support pain management with non-pharmacological interventions feasible for their practice and adaptable to palliative care patients’ needs. Objectives: The objective was to identify non-pharmacological interventions feasible in the nursing scope of practice affecting pain in palliative care patients. Design: A systematic review. Data sources and methods: A defined search strategy was used in PubMed, CINAHL, PsycINFO, and Embase. Search results were screened double-blinded. Methodological quality was double-appraised with the Joanna Briggs Institute Critical Appraisal Tools. Data were extracted from selected studies and the findings were summarized. The methodological quality, quantity of studies evaluating the same intervention, and consistency in the findings were synthesized in a best-evidence synthesis to rank evidence as strong, moderate, limited, mixed, or insufficient. Results: Out of 2385 articles, 22 studies highlighted non-pharmacological interventions in the nursing scope of practice. Interventions using massage therapy and virtual reality demonstrated most evidentiary support for pain management, while art therapy lacked sufficient evidence. Mindful breathing intervention showed no significant reduction in pain. Hypnosis, progressive muscle-relaxation-interactive-guided imagery, cognitive-behavioral audiotapes, wrapped warm footbath, reflexology, and music therapy exhibited promising results in pain reduction, whereas mindfulness-based stress reduction program, aromatherapy, and aroma-massage therapy did not. Conclusion: Despite not all studies reaching significant changes in pain scores, non-pharmacological interventions can be clinically relevant to palliative care patients. Its use should be discussed for its potential value and nurses to be trained for safe practice. Methodologically rigorous research for non-pharmacological interventions in nursing scope of practice for pain relief in palliative care patients is necessary. Trial registration: The protocol for this study is registered in the International Prospective Register of Systematic Review (PROSPERO registration number: CRD42020196781).
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护理实践范围内可行的用于缓解姑息关怀患者疼痛的非药物干预措施:系统性综述
背景:姑息关怀患者希望有更多的症状管理干预措施来辅助他们的医疗治疗。在多专业团队中,护士可以通过可行的非药物干预来帮助支持疼痛管理,并适应姑息关怀患者的需求。目标:目的是确定在护理实践范围内可行的影响姑息关怀患者疼痛的非药物干预措施。设计:系统综述。数据来源和方法:在PubMed、CINAHL、PsycINFO和Embase中采用明确的检索策略。对检索结果进行双盲筛选。采用乔安娜-布里格斯研究所(Joanna Briggs Institute)的关键评估工具对方法学质量进行双重评估。从选定的研究中提取数据并对结果进行总结。在最佳证据综合法中,对方法学质量、评估相同干预措施的研究数量以及研究结果的一致性进行综合,将证据分为有力、适度、有限、混合或不充分。结果:在 2385 篇文章中,有 22 项研究强调了护理实践范围内的非药物干预措施。使用按摩疗法和虚拟现实技术进行的干预在疼痛管理方面得到了最多的证据支持,而艺术疗法则缺乏足够的证据。意念呼吸干预没有显示出明显的疼痛减轻效果。催眠、渐进式肌肉放松-交互式引导想象、认知行为录音带、包裹式温热足浴、反射疗法和音乐疗法在减轻疼痛方面表现出良好的效果,而正念减压计划、芳香疗法和芳香按摩疗法则没有。结论尽管并非所有研究都能明显改变疼痛评分,但非药物干预对姑息治疗患者具有临床意义。应讨论其使用的潜在价值,并对护士进行安全实践方面的培训。有必要对护理实践范围内的非药物干预进行严格的方法学研究,以缓解姑息治疗患者的疼痛。试验注册:本研究方案已在国际前瞻性系统综述注册中心注册(PROSPERO 注册号:CRD42020196781)。
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来源期刊
Palliative Care and Social Practice
Palliative Care and Social Practice Nursing-Advanced and Specialized Nursing
CiteScore
2.90
自引率
0.00%
发文量
37
审稿时长
9 weeks
期刊最新文献
Medical influence: what does success look like? Palliative care consultation in the last week of life and associated factors: a cross-sectional general population study. Using relational ethics to approach equity in palliative care. Fostering timely integrated palliative care in nursing homes through critical companionship: experiences from a Padi-Palli interventional study in France. Experience or perception: What healthcare providers need when using the Utrecht Symptom Diary-4 Dimensional, a mixed-methods study.
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