Anxiety Clinical Trial
Official title:
Patient Experience in the CT Scan Suite
- Rationale: Recently, research that demonstrates a clear relationship between the built
healthcare environment and the health and wellbeing of patients has come available.
Patients in a CT scan suite are usually anxious. The environment has been shown to
lower stress; a painting or piece of art for example, can capture and hold attention
and thereby lower negative thoughts and evoke positive emotions. Sights of nature have
demonstrated to be especially effective in recuperating from stress, presumably because
the human brain has evolved in a natural environment. The current study will
investigate the effects of exposure to nature in the CT scan suite. A SkyCeiling, a
large, slightly illuminated, photographic illusion of a real sky view is placed above
the CT scan. The main hypothesis of this study is that a sky view will lead to a lower
level of anxiety in the CT scan suite.
- Objective: The primary objective of this study is to examine the effect of a view of
nature on a patient's stress and anxiety. Secondary objectives are to study the effects
of a view of nature on a patient's environmental appraisals of the CT suite,
satisfaction with the provided service, and trust in the healthcare provider.
1. INTRODUCTION AND RATIONALE
The importance and the potential benefits of well-designed healthcare facilities have
been widely acknowledged and recent research clearly demonstrates the relationship
between the built healthcare environment and patients' health and well-being (Dijkstra,
2009).
Encounters with healthcare situations are generally characterized by fear, anxiety,
stress, and uncertainty (Mitchell, 2003; Pearson, Maddern, & Fitridge, 2005). Looking
at most environments in which these encounters take place, one might rightfully ask how
well these healthcare environments satisfy the psychological needs of patients.
In order to create more beneficial environments, environmental stimuli can be added to
(or removed from) the environment to influence the patient in a positive manner. The
environment may elicit positive feelings, hold attention and interest, and block or
reduce negative thoughts, for example, by the presence of art or a view from a window
(R. S. Ulrich, 1984). The purpose of the present study is to improve patients'
well-being by adding positive elements to existing healthcare environments, such as
pictures of nature.
Stress is an important factor in healthcare situations and stress reactions can be
considered a clinical problem since they often result in negative or worsened medical
outcomes (Malkin, 2008). Previous studies (Volicer & Volicer, 1978), for example, found
that hospital stress was correlated with changes in heart rate and blood pressure.
Other studies showed that psychological stress impairs wound healing in patients
(Christian, Graham, Padgett, Glaser, & Kiecolt-Glaser, 2006; Kiecolt-Glaser, Marucha,
Malarkey, Mercado, & Glaser, 1995). Elbrecht and colleagues (Elbrecht et al., 2004)
studied the effects of perceived stress and cortisol levels on wound healing and
demonstrated a considerable negative effect of stress.
Rabin (2004 in Malkin 2008; personal communication 2008) proposed that pleasant
healthcare environments are those that are perceived by the brain as calming, meaning
that the stress reactive areas of the brain decrease their activity with a resultant
decrease in the concentration of cortisol and norepinephrine in the blood. This results
in patients experiencing less pain, having more restful sleep, less anger, less muscle
tension, and a lower risk of stroke. Furthermore, Kaplan and Kaplan (R. Kaplan &
Kaplan, 1989) state that "the nervous system seems to be structured in such a way that
pleasure and pain tend to inhibit each other". A more pleasant healthcare environment
could, therefore, result in less stress and anxiety in patients and this should lead to
better health and increased feelings of well-being. When speaking about a more pleasant
healthcare environment, a wide variety of environmental characteristics come to mind.
Variables such as indoor plants and music could help create environments that generate
positive feelings and, as a consequence, reduce negative outcomes.
Nonpharmacological anti-anxiety interventions The advantage of using environmental
interventions to lower anxiety is that these kind of interventions do not carry any
risk and are not time consuming. Several studies have examined various methods of
anxiety reduction in healthcare environments. For example, research has demonstrated
the beneficial effects of scents on anxiety and mood in dental patients (Lehrner,
Eckersberger, Walla, Poetsch, & Deecke, 2000; Lehrner, Marwinski, Lehr, Johren, &
Deecke, 2005) Furthermore, music therapy has successfully been applied to reduce pain
and anxiety in patients undergoing various medical procedures, such as children with
cancer undergoing lumbar puncture (Thanh Nhan, Nilsson, Hellström, & Bengtson, 2010)
and women during caesarian delivery (Chang & Chen, 2005). Sunlight appeared to have
beneficial effects on perceived stress (Walch et al., 2005). A recent study (Park &
Mattson, 2009) demonstrated that indoor plants in a hospital room can have therapeutic
value and serve as a noninvasive and effective complementary medicine for surgical
patients. Esthetic enhancements can thus provide unobtrusive and inexpensive stress and
anxiety management methods. In this study we propose nature as an anti-anxiety
intervention, which possibly has an even stronger effect on anxiety then scent,
daylight or music.
Nature interventions Research on restorative environments suggests that certain
environments are capable of promoting recovery from stress. Especially natural settings
have these restorative effects (Hartig, Book, Garvill, Olsson, & Garling, 1996).
Considering the potential healing properties of nature (Lohr & Pearson-Mims, 2000; R.
S. Ulrich, 1984), exposing patients to natural elements may be an effective way of
reducing stress. A recent review concluded that viewing nature scenes may decrease pain
perceptions by eliciting positive emotional responses and decreasing stress (Malenbaum,
Keefe, Williams, Ulrich, & Somers, 2008).
Ulrich et al. (R. Ulrich et al., 1991) studied the effects of exposure to nature on
stress recovery. Participants watched a videotape that induced feelings of stress, and
were afterwards exposed to a tape with either a natural or an urban environment.
Results demonstrated that individuals recover sooner from stress when exposed to the
former (natural) than the latter (urban). Lohr and Pearson-Mims (2000) studied whether
the presence of indoor plants would increase pain tolerance. Participants were either
placed in a room with plants, a room with non-plant objects (as visually distractive as
the plants), or a control room (no objects). Results showed that a significantly larger
proportion of respondents in the room with plants were able to keep their hand in the
ice water for 5 minutes as compared to the other conditions, suggesting increased pain
tolerance by exposure to indoor plants. They also showed that the room with plants was
rated more positively (e.g., cheerful, calming, pleasant) than either of the control
rooms. The results of these studies support the idea that nature may have beneficial
effects on the health and well-being of people.
Natural elements in the built environment have clearly shown stress-reducing
properties, but it is still unclear which underlying mechanism causes this
stress-reduction. A potential explanation lies in the theories by Kaplan (S. Kaplan,
1987) and Ulrich (R. S. Ulrich, 1983), which state that people have a tendency to
prefer natural settings to built environments. Although these two theories have some
important differences (see Hartig et al. (1996) for a discussion), both are based on
the same evolutionary assumptions. The preferences for natural settings are assumed to
have an evolutionary base; people are to some extent biologically adapted to natural as
opposed to built environments. Secondly, it might be argued that nature may be
processed more easily and efficiently because the brain and sensory systems evolved in
natural environments (Wohlwill, 1983). As a result, humans have an innate tendency to
pay attention and respond positively to natural elements (Ulrich et al., 1991). This
predisposition to prefer natural elements to man-made objects may be the explanation of
the stress-reducing effects of nature. It might thus be hypothesized that natural
elements affect feelings of stress through the perceived attractiveness of an
environment.
In a laboratory experiment, Dijkstra et al. (Dijkstra, Pieterse, & Pruyn, 2008) tested
this hypothesis and demonstrated the stress-reducing properties of indoor plants in a
simulated hospital room. Moreover, this effect was mediated by the perceived
attractiveness of the hospital room. The presence of indoor plants in a hospital
resulted in participants perceiving the room as more attractive, which in turn resulted
in less perceived stress. Considering the potential infection risks of real plants,
Dijkstra (Dijkstra, 2009) conducted a second experiment in a figurative painting of a
tree was added to a patient room. This second experiment re-confirmed the
stress-reducing properties of nature, and replicated the mediating effect of perceived
attractiveness on stress. Furthermore, stress is not only reduced by indoor plants, but
by a painting of nature as well. An association task revealed that, next to indoor
plants, a painting of a tree also activated the concept of nature. This suggests that a
mere association with nature could potentially lead to beneficial effects.
Taken together, nature interventions have shown to be beneficial in a variety of
settings. This includes both real and simulated nature interventions. Applying such
nature interventions in the CT scan suite might thus lead to beneficial effects in
patients.
2. OBJECTIVES
This research project aims to gain insight in how the physical environment of the CT scan
suite affects patients' health and well-being. Patients undergoing procedures in a CT scan
suite are often anxious and frightened. Stress reactions can be considered a clinical
problem since they often result in negative or worsened medical outcomes. Reduction in state
anxiety may help to promote relaxation, which in turn is beneficial for a patient's sense of
well-being.
Primary Objective: to determine whether a skyceiling lowers stress and anxiety during
diagnostic procedures in a CT scan suite.
Secondary Objective(s): to determine whether a skyceiling improves environmental appraisals,
mood, satisfaction with the provided service, time perception, and trust in the healthcare
provider.
;
Observational Model: Case-Only, Time Perspective: Cross-Sectional
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