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R
E S E A R C H
Foot-and-Hand Massage
Eases Postoperative Pain
A 20-minute foot-and-hand massage
significantly reduced subjects’ perception of pain intensity
and distress the day after surgery, and also lowered their heart
and respiratory rates, according to a recent study.
“Foot and Hand Massage as an
Intervention for Postoperative Pain” was conducted by staff
at Clarion Health Partners Methodist Hospital and Indiana University
School of Nursing, in Indianapolis, Indiana.
Eighteen subjects who underwent surgery
participated in this study the day after their operations. Participants
were age 20 or older, and recovering from gastrointestinal, gynecological,
urological, head, neck or plastic surgery. They each received pain
medication one-to-four hours before the massage intervention and
had asked for an intervention to relieve their pain the day after
surgery. All subjects reported that the surgical wound was the area
that hurt most.
Pain intensity and distress scores,
heart rate, respiratory rate and blood pressure were measured before
and immediately after the 20-minute massage. Subjects were also
asked to rate the percentage of pain relief from the pain medication
before the massage and the percentage of pain relief from the massage
following the intervention.
The same person provided the foot-and-hand
massage to all participants. The massage consisted of petrissage,
friction and kneading for five minutes on each hand and each foot,
for a total of 20 minutes.
Perceived pain intensity was measured
using a scale that ranged from 0 (no pain) to 10 (pain as bad as
you can imagine). Perceived distress was measured on a similar scale,
ranging from 0 to 10. Perceived pain relief, from both the pain
medication and the massage intervention, was measured on a percentage
scale, ranging from 0 percent (no relief) to 100 percent (complete
relief).
Results of the study showed significant
reductions in both pain intensity and distress after the 20-minute
massage, as well as significant decreases in heart rate and respiratory
rate, but not systolic and diastolic blood pressure.
“The findings from the study
indicated that a 20-minute foot and hand massage significantly reduced
both pain intensity and distress resulting from incisional pain
on the first postoperative day,” state the study’s authors.
“Foot and hand massage appears to be an effective, inexpensive,
low-risk, flexible, easily applied strategy for postoperative pain
management.”
- Source: Clarion Health
Partners Methodist Hospital and Indiana University School of Nursing,
Indianapolis, Indiana. Authors: Hsiao-Lan Wang, R.N., and Juanita
F. Keck, R.N. Originally published in Pain Management Nursing, June
2004, Vol. 5, No. 2, pp. 59-65.
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