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R
E S E A R C H
Acupressure for
Fatigue and Depression in End-Stage Renal Disease
Acupressure and massage ease
fatigue and depression in people with end-stage renal disease -
kidney failure - who are undergoing hemodialysis, a recent study
reported.
“The effect of Acupressure with
Massage on Fatigue and Depression in Patients with End-Stage Renal
Disease” was conducted by staff at the National Tainan Institute
of Nursing Department of Nursing, in Tainan, Taiwan, and the National
Taipei College of Nursing Graduate Institute, in Taipei, Taiwan.
Sixty-two people with end-stage renal
disease undergoing hemodialysis participated in the study. They
were randomly assigned to either the experimental group, where they
received acupressure and massage, or the control group, where they
continued to receive standard care.
Subjects in the experimental group
received acupressure for 12 minutes per day, followed by a three-minute
massage of the legs, three days a week, for four weeks. The acupressure
points Zusanli, Sanyinjiao, Taixi and Yungchuan were deemed appropriate
for easing fatigue and depression.
These points were pressed and rubbed
using the pads of the fingers with a force of about three-to-five
kilograms for five seconds, with a one-second release at the end.
Each point was stimulated for three minutes. After 12 minutes of
acupressure, subjects’ legs were massaged for three minutes.
Researchers used the revised Piper Fatigue
Scale to measure fatigue, and the Chinese version of Beck’s
Depression Inventory was used to measure depression, at the beginning
and end of the four-week study.
The results of the study revealed a
significant decrease in perceived fatigue from the start to the
finish of the study for subjects in the experimental group, whereas
the control group showed no significant difference in perceived
fatigue from pretest to post-test.
There was also a significant improvement
from pretest to post-test on depression scores for the experimental
group. The control group showed no significant difference in depression
scores from the beginning to the end of the study.
The study’s authors concluded
that acupressure with massage could effectively improve fatigue
and depression in people with end-stage renal disease, and that
it should be considered when caring for this population.
“Assessment of [end-stage renal
disease] patients’ fatigue and depression should be an essential
part of nursing practice, and clinicians may consider providing
acupressure therapy as a method for improving dialysis patients’
fatigue and depression,” state the study’s authors.
“Nurses, patients and their families could be easily trained
to administer acupressure to those who have fatigue and depression.”
- Source: National
Tainan Institute of Nursing Department of Nursing, in Tainan, Taiwan,
and National Taipei College of Nursing Graduate Institute, in Taipei,
Taiwan. Authors: Yi-Ching Cho, R.N., Shiow-Luan Tsay, R.N., Ph.D.
Originally published in Journal of Nursing Research, 2004, Vol.
12, No. 1, pp.51-58.
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