Massage therapy in palliative care populations: a narrative review of literature from 2012 to 2022.


Journal

Annals of palliative medicine
ISSN: 2224-5839
Titre abrégé: Ann Palliat Med
Pays: China
ID NLM: 101585484

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
Sep 2023
Historique:
received: 04 02 2023
accepted: 31 07 2023
medline: 23 10 2023
pubmed: 21 8 2023
entrez: 21 8 2023
Statut: ppublish

Résumé

Patients living with serious illness are often eligible for palliative care and experience physical symptoms including pain or dyspnea and psychological distress that negatively impacts health-related quality of life and other outcomes. Such patients often benefit from massage therapy to reduce symptom burden and improve quality of life when such treatment is available. At present, no synthesis or review exists exploring massage therapy specifically provided with palliative care patient populations. This review is needed because those with serious illness are a growing and important vulnerable population. Massage therapy is used frequently and in many healthcare delivery contexts, but the body of research has not led to its systematic integration or broad acceptance. PubMed search for clinical research focused on massage therapy for palliative care-eligible populations from 2012 and 2022. Search terms included keywords: massage, massage therapy, serious illness, advanced illness, and palliative care. Thirteen unique articles were identified through the PubMed database search and from a manual review of references. Study designs of included articles were one pilot, one quasi-experimental single-arm study, one mixed-methods study, two qualitative (both with hospital-based palliative care populations), seven randomized controlled trials, and one retrospective cohort analysis in a major Veterans Health Administration health care facility. Variability was found in study design, scope, sample size, and outcomes for related articles published in the last ten years. Few eligible interventions reflected real-world massage therapy delivery suggesting more clinical research is needed to examine massage provided by massage therapists trained to work with palliative care populations. Gaps in the current body of existing evidence supports the need for this review and recommendations for the direction of future related research.

Sections du résumé

BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVE OBJECTIVE
Patients living with serious illness are often eligible for palliative care and experience physical symptoms including pain or dyspnea and psychological distress that negatively impacts health-related quality of life and other outcomes. Such patients often benefit from massage therapy to reduce symptom burden and improve quality of life when such treatment is available. At present, no synthesis or review exists exploring massage therapy specifically provided with palliative care patient populations. This review is needed because those with serious illness are a growing and important vulnerable population. Massage therapy is used frequently and in many healthcare delivery contexts, but the body of research has not led to its systematic integration or broad acceptance.
METHODS METHODS
PubMed search for clinical research focused on massage therapy for palliative care-eligible populations from 2012 and 2022. Search terms included keywords: massage, massage therapy, serious illness, advanced illness, and palliative care.
KEY CONTENT AND FINDINGS UNASSIGNED
Thirteen unique articles were identified through the PubMed database search and from a manual review of references. Study designs of included articles were one pilot, one quasi-experimental single-arm study, one mixed-methods study, two qualitative (both with hospital-based palliative care populations), seven randomized controlled trials, and one retrospective cohort analysis in a major Veterans Health Administration health care facility.
CONCLUSIONS CONCLUSIONS
Variability was found in study design, scope, sample size, and outcomes for related articles published in the last ten years. Few eligible interventions reflected real-world massage therapy delivery suggesting more clinical research is needed to examine massage provided by massage therapists trained to work with palliative care populations. Gaps in the current body of existing evidence supports the need for this review and recommendations for the direction of future related research.

Identifiants

pubmed: 37599559
doi: 10.21037/apm-23-126
pii: apm-23-126
doi:

Types de publication

Review Journal Article

Langues

eng

Sous-ensembles de citation

IM

Pagination

963-975

Auteurs

Cal Cates (C)

Healwell, Arlington, VA, USA.

Kerry Jordan (K)

Healwell, Arlington, VA, USA.

Niki Munk (N)

Department of Health Sciences, Indiana University School of Health and Human Sciences, Indianapolis, IN, USA; Australian Research Centre in Complementary and Integrative Medicine (ARCCIM), Massage & Myotherapy Australia Fellow and Visiting Faculty of Health, University of Technology Sydney, Sydney, Australia; National Centre for Naturopathic Medicine, Southern Cross University, East Lismore, Australia.

Rory Farrand (R)

National Hospice and Palliative Care Organization, Alexandria, VA, USA.

Ann Blair Kennedy (AB)

Department of Biomedical Sciences, University of South Carolina School of Medicine Greenville, Greenville, SC, USA; Prisma Health Department of Family Medicine, Prisma Health, Greenville, SC, USA.

Hunter Groninger (H)

MedStar Health Research Institute, Hyattsville, MD, USA; Department of Medicine, Georgetown University School of Medicine, Washington, DC, USA.

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Classifications MeSH