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R
E S E A R C H
Aromatherapy and
Massage Improve Sleep in Advanced Cancer Patients
A study of the long-term effects
of massage and aromatherapy on the physical and psychological symptoms
of patients with advanced cancer showed that the intervention significantly
improved subjects’ quality of sleep, but provided only short-term
benefits for pain and anxiety.
"A randomized controlled trial
of aromatherapy massage in a hospice setting" was conducted
by staff at Princess Alice Hospice, in Esher, Surrey, United Kingdom;
the North Surrey Primary Care Trust, in Surrey, United Kingdom;
and The Royal Marsden Hospital, in Sutton, Surrey, United Kingdom.
Forty-two subjects diagnosed with cancer
were randomly assigned to receive either massage with lavender essential
oil and an inert carrier oil; massage with an inert carrier oil
only; or no massage.
Subjects in the massage groups received
a 30-minute standardized back massage once a week for four weeks.
Subjects in the no-massage group - the control group - completed
the researchers’ questionnaires and assessments, but received
no intervention.
Evaluations took place at the beginning
and end of the study, using a Visual Analogue Scale and a Modified
Tursky Pain Descriptors Scale for pain intensity; the Verran and
Snyder-Halpern sleep scale; the Hospital Anxiety and Depression
scale; and the Rotterdam Symptom Checklist.
Evaluations of pain, sleep and the
Hospital and Anxiety Depression scale also took place on a weekly
basis.
Results of the study showed that subjects
in both massage groups had significantly better sleep scores than
subjects in the control group at the end of the study.
"Our results suggest that aromatherapy
and massage may have a beneficial effect on sleep quality in patients
with advanced cancer," state the study’s authors.
The study also showed a statistically
significant reduction in pain for both the massage groups following
the second massage treatment, but no long-term pain reduction at
the end of the study.
There were no statistically significant
long-term differences among groups for either the Hospital Anxiety
and Depression scale or the Rotterdam Symptom Checklist. Subjects
in the massage-only group, however, had significantly better scores
on the Hospital Anxiety and Depression scale after the second and
fourth massage sessions.
"In this study, we did not set
physical or psychological entrance criteria and patients were, therefore,
recruited with varying levels of pain, sleep difficulties, anxiety
and other symptoms," state the study’s authors. "These
findings suggest that if the inclusion criteria were refined, the
measurable benefits of treatment may be greater."
- Source: Princess Alice Hospice,
in Esher, Surrey, United Kingdom; North Surrey Primary Care Trust,
in Surrey, United Kingdom; The Royal Marsden Hospital, in Sutton,
Surrey, United Kingdom. Authors: Katie Soden, Karen Vincent, Stephen
Craske, Caroline Lucas and Sue Ashley. Originally published in Palliative
Medicine, 2004, No. 18, pp. 87-92.
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