对儿童癌症患者进行指压和治疗性触摸,以促进治疗期间的主观和主观内幸福体验。

IF 1.9 Journal of the Economic Science Association Pub Date : 2019-09-30 eCollection Date: 2019-01-01 DOI:10.1177/2164956119880143
Hiroe Hu, Deborah Shear, Radhika Thakkar, Ariana Thompson-Lastad, Howard Pinderhughes, Frederick M Hecht, E Anne Lown
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引用次数: 0

摘要

目的:对接受癌症治疗的儿童来说,穴位按摩和治疗性抚触可能有利于控制症状和提高总体健康水平。穴位按摩在提供治疗性触摸的同时,还能刺激目标穴位。我们试图探讨穴位按摩与接受穴位按摩的癌症患儿的幸福感之间的关系:在 "儿童癌症治疗中的穴位按摩 "试验中,住院儿童接受了穴位按摩,通过指定的穴位按摩来控制症状,同时还通过穴位按摩来改善一般健康状况。穴位按摩由专业人员和护理人员在经过专业人员培训后进行。通过对专业穴位按摩提供者(3 人)和主要照护者(13 人)进行半结构式访谈,并在穴位按摩干预过程中对参与者进行观察,收集定性数据。采用基础理论方法对数据进行了分析:对提供者访谈、护理者访谈和参与观察的分析产生了 3 个突出主题:(1)穴位按摩带来的幸福感;(2)触摸带来的幸福感;(3)体验到的关系和主体间的幸福感。这些主题结合在一起,说明了穴位按摩等干预措施可以通过促进儿童和照顾者的幸福感,帮助减轻儿童癌症患病经历中的困难。穴位按摩为儿童带来了症状缓解、身体放松和抚慰,让照顾者也能感受到缓解和放松,因为照顾者和儿童的幸福体验是紧密相连的:来自三个来源的数据提供了独特而重叠的见解,表明穴位按摩在促进儿童癌症治疗期间的幸福感方面具有多种益处。专业的穴位按摩结合对儿童癌症护理人员的培训可能是一种关系干预措施,可促进护理人员和儿童的幸福体验。
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Acupressure and Therapeutic Touch in Childhood Cancer to Promote Subjective and Intersubjective Experiences of Well-being During Curative Treatment.

Purpose: Acupressure and therapeutic touch may be beneficial for symptom management and increasing general well-being for children undergoing cancer treatment. Acupressure has the benefit of stimulating targeted acupuncture points while providing therapeutic touch. We sought to explore the relationship between acupressure and the experience of well-being among children being treated for cancer who received acupressure.

Methods: In the Acupressure for Children in Treatment for a Childhood Cancer trial, hospitalized children received acupressure using specified acupressure points for symptom control as well as points for general well-being. Acupressure was delivered by professionals and by caregivers, following training by the professional. Qualitative data were collected through semistructured interviews with a purposive sample of professional acupressure providers (n = 3) and primary caregivers (n = 13), combined with participant observation during the acupressure intervention. Data were analyzed using grounded theory methods.

Results: Analysis of provider interview, caregiver interview, and participation observation yielded 3 prominent themes: (1) well-being elicited by acupressure, (2) well-being elicited by touch, and (3) well-being experienced as relational and intersubjective. These themes, taken together, illustrate the intricate ways in which an intervention like acupressure can help alleviate the difficulties of a childhood cancer illness experience by promoting well-being in the child as well as the caregiver. Acupressure brought symptom relief, physical relaxation, and comforting touch to the child, allowing the caregiver to also feel relief and relaxation as caregiver-child experience of well-being are closely intertwined.

Conclusions: Data from the 3 sources provided distinct and overlapping insights suggesting the versatile benefits of acupressure in promoting well-being during childhood cancer treatment. Professional acupressure combined with training of caregivers for childhood cancer may be a relational intervention that facilitates the experience of well-being for both the caregiver and the child.

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