Pain Clinical Trial
Official title:
Does Music Therapy Improve Patient Mood, Pain, Satisfaction and Caregiver Satisfaction on Adult Inpatient Acute Neurological Units?
A study examining the benefits of music therapy on patients, families, and unit staff on acute neurologic or inpatient rehabilitation units.
Objective: Does music therapy improve mood, pain and patient satisfaction on adult inpatient neurological units? Is music therapy an acceptable and feasible intervention in an adult inpatient neurological unit based on patient, family, and care provider satisfaction measures? Population: Foothills Medical Centre (FMC) acute neurological and neurorehabilitation units (i.e., 111, 112, 101, 58 Neurorehab), ages >18 Background: Music therapy is the therapeutic application of music to rehabilitate cognitive, motor, and sensory dysfunction due to disease. Its treatment techniques are based upon scientific knowledge of music perception, production and its effects on nonmusical brain and behavior functions like gait, balance, speech, mood and motivation. Music is also known to have a wide range of physiological effects on the human body including changes in heart rate, respiration, blood pressure, skin temperature, and muscle tension. Music provokes emotions mediated via neuro-hormones such as serotonin and dopamine, and is experienced as joyous or rewarding through activity changes in the amygdala, ventral striatum and other parts of the limbic system. Music therapy has been applied across a broad range of clinical conditions from inpatients to outpatients, cardiac, diabetes and cancer care to surgical and ICU settings, and in pediatric through adult and geriatric populations. The majority of clinical studies focus on neurological patients with sensorimotor, speech and gait impairments, however, music has been shown to improve mental state and functioning in a wide variety of psychiatric disorders including depression, anxiety, and dementia, as well as reducing anxiety in patients with asthma, osteoarthritis, those undergoing dental procedures or perioperative anesthesia. There is some research to support its mood benefits in stroke and brain injury patients. Music therapy has been found to be an effective complementary treatment for cancer-related pain, lithotripsy, labor, and fibromyalgia. Recent reviews have demonstrated reductions in postoperative pain and anxiety, decreased consumption of sedatives and analgesics and increased patient satisfaction. The reductions in anxiety were equal or greater than midazolam/benzodiazepines. This may be particularly beneficial in neurological patients who may be more susceptible to adverse effects from psychoactive, sedating and analgesic medications. Music can provide a filter for unpleasant, unfamiliar sounds common to the hospital environment and improve sleep quality. These positive effects may greatly assist the common issues of fatigue in cognitively impaired, confused or agitated neurological inpatients. Furthermore, Chlan has recently demonstrated cost-effectiveness of music therapy interventions in reducing anxiety in the ICU. Music therapy may also have beneficial effects for staff and families. Some studies have demonstrated cost-effectiveness with less staff time required for procedures, administering sedatives and pain medications, and fewer days on mechanical ventilation in the ICU. Perez-Cruz studied patients, relatives, and healthcare workers' preference for background music in patient areas with an average 71% in all three groups. Lower perceived stress level, cortisol, heart rate and mean arterial pressures were also observed in voluntary first-line nurses and students while listening to music. This study will expand the research base in the inpatient neurological population and explore staff perceptions and satisfaction with music therapy. The aim of this mixed methods study is to explore immediate pre and post music therapy intervention effects on mood, pain, and satisfaction in the inpatient neurological population and to explore perceived caregiver and staff satisfaction with music therapy on inpatient neurological units. Intervention: 20-40 min treatment sessions 1:1 within acute neurological patient rooms, or private room by qualified music therapist once weekly and/or group music therapy sessions maximum 6-8 patients < or = 1 hour. This includes a variety of music therapy techniques used to target mood, pain, socialization, expressive speech, attention/cognitive or sensorimotor functional goals. Methods: Mixed methods study design. 1. Qualitative measures: 1. Semi-structured patient +/- family satisfaction questionnaire and interview post music therapy session 2. Semi-structured inpatient unit staff questionnaire and interview (exploring themes of: self-perceived stress, workload, barriers, relationships, mood, pain) 3. Focus groups of patients, families, staff addressing above areas 2. Quantitative measures: 1. Visual analog scale, mood pre- and post- music therapy session 2. Visual analog scale, pain pre- and post- music therapy session Recruitment: Patients (and their families when available) referred to Music therapy on Acute Neuro, Neurorehab units would be invited to participate in research study with informed consent obtained prior to interviews, focus groups and data collection. Unit Staff would also be invited to participate in interviews and focus groups with informed consent prior to data collection. ;
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