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E S E A R C H
Massage and Healing
Touch Ease Cancer Symptoms
Massage therapy and healing touch reduced pain, mood disturbance
(anger, anxiety, depression, confusion) and fatigue in cancer patients
undergoing chemotherapy, according to a recent study.
"Therapeutic Massage and Healing
Touch Improve Symptoms in Cancer" was conducted by staff at
the University of Minnesota in Minneapolis, and United Hospital
Department of Integrative Health in St. Paul, Minnesota.
Eighty-seven percent of the 164 subjects
in the study were women. More than half of them had breast cancer;
other types of cancers prevalent in the study were gynecological
or genitourinary cancer, gastro-intestinal cancer and lung cancer,
among others.
Subjects were randomly assigned to
one of three groups: massage therapy, healing touch or caring presence.
They received 45 minutes of the assigned intervention per week for
four weeks. All participants also received four weeks of standard
cancer care alone, which was the control condition.
In the massage group, a standard Swedish
massage was given, with modifications for tumor or surgical sites,
as well as individual tolerance.
In the healing-touch group, a protocol
developed by Healing Touch International was used, involving both
touch and non-touch techniques, such as centering, unruffling, magnetic
unruffling, full-body connection and mind clearing.
Subjects in the caring-presence group
laid on the massage table for 45 minutes and listened to the same
relaxing music played during the massage and healing-touch sessions,
while one of the massage or healing-touch therapists was present.
Immediate outcomes, measured before
and after each intervention session, or once per control session,
were heart rate, respiratory rate, blood pressure, and self-reports
of pain and nausea.
Outcomes evaluated at the beginning
and end of each four-week period were anxiety, mood, fatigue, pain,
nausea, use of analgesics and antiemetics, and overall satisfaction
with care.
Both massage therapy and healing touch
reduced blood pressure, respiratory rate, heart rate, total mood
disturbance and pain. Subjects in the healing-touch group also had
lower fatigue, while subjects in the massage group had lower anxiety
and used less nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs).
Caring presence was found to reduce
respiratory rate and heart rate, but did not differ from standard
care on any other outcomes.
"[Massage therapy] and [healing
touch] were more effective than presence alone or standard care
in inducing physical relaxation, reducing pain, improving mood states
and fatigue," state the study's authors. "These results
clearly suggest a benefit to both massage and [healing touch] that
goes beyond the mere presence of a caring practitioner."
- Source: University
of Minnesota in Minneapolis and United Hospital Department of Integrative
Health in St. Paul, Minnesota. Authors: Janice Post-White, R.N.,
Ph.D.; Mary Ellen Kinney, R.N.; Kay Savik; Joanna Bernsten Gau,
R.N.; Carol Wilcox, R.N.; and Irving Lerner, M.D. Originally published
in Integrative Cancer Therapies, 2003, Vol. 2, No. 4, pp. 332-344.
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