Cary A Brown, Annette Rivard, Kathy Reid, Bruce Dick, Leisa Bellmore, Pei Qin, Vineet Prasad, Yuluan Wang
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Because exclusive pharmacological management of sleep problems for children with pain is contraindicated, the development of appropriate non-pharmacological sleep interventions is a significant, largely unmet, need.</p><p><strong>Purpose: </strong>This study examined whether the application of a standardized hand self-shiatsu (HSS) intervention within a population of young people with chronic pain would be associated with improved objectively and subjectively measured sleep.</p><p><strong>Setting: </strong>The Pain Management Clinic of the Stollery Children's Hospital Hospital, a large tertiary care centre in Edmonton, Alberta and the University of Alberta.</p><p><strong>Research design: </strong>Sixteen young adults, aged 17 to 27, were recruited for a case series study. The intervention involved participants self-applying a standardized hand shiatsu protocol. Participants wore an actigraph for one week at baseline before learning the HSS technique, and then at four- and eight-week follow-up. At the same measurement points they completed validated self-report measures of their sleep quality and daytime fatigue. Each participant also completed a sleep log to supplement the actigraphy data and to collect their general impressions of the HSS experience. Data were analyzed with SPSS 23 software, using Freidman's test for analysis of variance.</p><p><strong>Results: </strong>The objective data did not support the hypothesis that this standardized HSS protocol improves objectively measured sleep. However, standardized self-report measures demonstrated statistically significant improvement in perceived sleep disturbance (chi-squared test [χ<sup>2</sup>] = 8.034, <i>p</i> = .02), sleep-related impairment (χ<sup>2</sup> = 7.614, <i>p</i> = .02), and daytime fatigue as measured by the PROMIS Fatigue SF 8-a (χ<sup>2</sup> = 12.035, <i>p</i> = .002), and the Flinder's Fatigue Scale (χ<sup>2</sup> = 11.93, <i>p</i> = .003). Qualitative sleep log information indicated wide-spread endorsement of HSS for the management of sleep difficulties.</p><p><strong>Conclusion: </strong>Contrary to objective findings, self-report data support the technique of HSS to improve sleep. Participants' comments reflected an overall high level of acceptance and appreciation for the HSS technique. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
背景:高达30%的年轻人存在睡眠问题,而慢性疼痛患者的睡眠问题则有所增加。由于对疼痛儿童的睡眠问题进行专门的药物管理是禁忌的,因此开发适当的非药物睡眠干预是一个重要的,很大程度上未得到满足的需求。目的:本研究探讨了在患有慢性疼痛的年轻人群体中应用标准化的手部自我指压(HSS)干预是否与改善客观和主观测量的睡眠有关。环境:Stollery儿童医院的疼痛管理诊所,这是艾伯塔省埃德蒙顿和艾伯塔省大学的大型三级护理中心。研究设计:16名年龄在17至27岁之间的年轻人被招募进行案例系列研究。干预包括参与者自行应用标准化的手部指压疗法。在学习HSS技术之前,参与者在基线上佩戴了一个星期的活动记录仪,然后在4周和8周的随访中。在相同的测量点,他们完成了有效的自我报告测量他们的睡眠质量和白天疲劳。每个参与者还完成了一份睡眠日志,以补充活动记录仪数据,并收集他们对HSS体验的总体印象。数据分析采用SPSS 23软件,方差分析采用Freidman检验。结果:客观数据不支持这种标准化HSS方案改善客观测量睡眠的假设。然而,标准化的自我报告测量显示,在感知睡眠障碍(χ2检验[χ2] = 8.034, p = 0.02)、睡眠相关障碍(χ2 = 7.614, p = 0.02)以及用PROMIS fatigue SF 8-a (χ2 = 12.035, p = 0.002)和Flinder疲劳量表(χ2 = 11.93, p = 0.003)测量的白天疲劳(χ2 = 11.035, p = 0.003)方面有统计学意义的改善。定性睡眠日志信息表明,HSS被广泛认可用于管理睡眠困难。结论:与客观结果相反,自我报告数据支持HSS技术改善睡眠。参与者的评论反映了对HSS技术的总体高度接受和赞赏。研究结果强调了拓展与睡眠测量相关的理论和实践以更好地整合定性领域的重要性。
Effectiveness of Hand Self-Shiatsu to Promote Sleep in Young People with Chronic Pain: a Case Series Design.
Background: Sleep problems exist for up to 30% of young people, and increase in the case of those with chronic pain. Because exclusive pharmacological management of sleep problems for children with pain is contraindicated, the development of appropriate non-pharmacological sleep interventions is a significant, largely unmet, need.
Purpose: This study examined whether the application of a standardized hand self-shiatsu (HSS) intervention within a population of young people with chronic pain would be associated with improved objectively and subjectively measured sleep.
Setting: The Pain Management Clinic of the Stollery Children's Hospital Hospital, a large tertiary care centre in Edmonton, Alberta and the University of Alberta.
Research design: Sixteen young adults, aged 17 to 27, were recruited for a case series study. The intervention involved participants self-applying a standardized hand shiatsu protocol. Participants wore an actigraph for one week at baseline before learning the HSS technique, and then at four- and eight-week follow-up. At the same measurement points they completed validated self-report measures of their sleep quality and daytime fatigue. Each participant also completed a sleep log to supplement the actigraphy data and to collect their general impressions of the HSS experience. Data were analyzed with SPSS 23 software, using Freidman's test for analysis of variance.
Results: The objective data did not support the hypothesis that this standardized HSS protocol improves objectively measured sleep. However, standardized self-report measures demonstrated statistically significant improvement in perceived sleep disturbance (chi-squared test [χ2] = 8.034, p = .02), sleep-related impairment (χ2 = 7.614, p = .02), and daytime fatigue as measured by the PROMIS Fatigue SF 8-a (χ2 = 12.035, p = .002), and the Flinder's Fatigue Scale (χ2 = 11.93, p = .003). Qualitative sleep log information indicated wide-spread endorsement of HSS for the management of sleep difficulties.
Conclusion: Contrary to objective findings, self-report data support the technique of HSS to improve sleep. Participants' comments reflected an overall high level of acceptance and appreciation for the HSS technique. Results highlight the importance of expanding the theory and practice related to sleep measurement to better integrate the qualitative domain.
期刊介绍:
The IJTMB is a peer-reviewed journal focusing on the research (methodological, physiological, and clinical) and professional development of therapeutic massage and bodywork and its providers, encompassing all allied health providers whose services include manually applied therapeutic massage and bodywork. The Journal provides a professional forum for editorial input; scientifically-based articles of a research, educational, and practice-oriented nature; readers’ commentaries on journal content and related professional matters; and pertinent news and announcements.