Trials / Completed
CompletedNCT05742672
Investigation of the Effect of Abdominal Massage Applied to Palliative Care Patients on Constipation and Quality of Life
- Status
- Completed
- Phase
- N/A
- Study type
- Interventional
- Enrollment
- 52 (actual)
- Sponsor
- Eskisehir Osmangazi University · Academic / Other
- Sex
- All
- Age
- 18 Years
- Healthy volunteers
- Accepted
Summary
The problem of constipation plays a very important role among these symptoms that patients experience intensely and negatively affect their quality of life. Although constipation is not a disease, it is a condition that causes discomfort to the person and may develop due to idiopathic reasons, as well as depending on diet, exercise habits, medications used and various disease processes. It may also occur. Constipation is one of the most common symptoms in patients treated in palliative care, and its prevalence is thought to be approximately 30-90%. Constipation is the third most common problem in palliative care, after pain and loss of appetite. Although drug therapy is the first method that comes to mind in the treatment of constipation, as it is known, medical treatment has many side effects risks and long-term drug use causes health problems. It creates a high financial burden on the care system. The high side effects and costs of laxative drugs used in the management of constipation necessitate the use of non-pharmacological methods. Non-pharmacological methods used in the management of constipation generally include regular exercise, fluid intake, and increased consumption of fiber foods. One of them is the abdominal massage method. The number of studies on the effects of abdominal massage in the Palliative Care patient group, who frequently experience constipation, is very limited in the literature. For these reasons, the study was planned to examine the effect of abdominal massage applied to palliative care patients on constipation and quality of life.
Detailed description
The problem of constipation plays a very important role among these symptoms that patients experience intensely and negatively affect their quality of life. Although constipation is not a disease, it is a condition that causes discomfort to the person and may develop due to idiopathic reasons, as well as depending on diet, exercise habits, medications used and various disease processes. It may also occur. Constipation is one of the most common symptoms in patients treated in palliative care, and its prevalence is thought to be approximately 30-90%. Constipation is the third most common problem in palliative care, after pain and loss of appetite. Although drug therapy is the first method that comes to mind in the treatment of constipation, as it is known, medical treatment has many side effects risks and long-term drug use causes health problems. It creates a high financial burden on the care system. The high side effects and costs of laxative drugs used in the management of constipation necessitate the use of non-pharmacological methods. Non-pharmacological methods used in the management of constipation generally include regular exercise, fluid intake, and increased consumption of fiber foods. One of them is the abdominal massage method. The number of studies on the effects of abdominal massage in the Palliative Care patient group, who frequently experience constipation, is very limited in the literature. For these reasons, the study was planned to examine the effect of abdominal massage applied to palliative care patients on constipation and quality of life.Abdominal massage applied to palliative care patients It was planned in two stages to determine its effect on constipation and quality of life. The first phase of the study was descriptive and cross-sectional, and the second phase was planned as a randomized experimental study with a pretest-post test control group design. In the first phase of the research, answers to the following questions will be sought. What is the severity of constipation in palliative care patients? -Performing daily living activities of palliative care patients How is the dependency independence situation? Hypotheses of the Research: H1: The application of abdominal massage to palliative care patients has an effect on constipation. H1: The application of abdominal massage to palliative care patients has a positive effect on the quality of life. The independent variable of the study was abdominal massage application, and the dependent variables were constipation and quality of life levels of palliative care patients.
Conditions
Interventions
| Type | Name | Description |
|---|---|---|
| OTHER | ABDOMINAL MASSAGE APPLICATION | * Experiment group twice a day in the morning and evening and 30 minutes after the feeding meal, for 15 minutes. For a period of time, effusion, petrissage, vibration massage movements will be applied by the researcher in accordance with the procedure (Abdominal Massage Application Directive). The application will continue for 7 days.- On the 3rd day (short term), 5th day (mid term) and 7th day (long term) to the massaged experimental group, the Constipation Severity Scale (CQS) and the Constipation Quality of Life Scale (QQQL) will be administered to determine the effect. * Day 7 Rome Ш Constipation Diagnostic Criteria (Annex: 2) will be applied again and the patient's constipation status will be evaluated for the last time. * Routine treatment and care practices in the clinic will continue. |
Timeline
- Start date
- 2022-12-01
- Primary completion
- 2023-05-30
- Completion
- 2023-06-30
- First posted
- 2023-02-24
- Last updated
- 2023-09-13
Locations
2 sites across 1 country: Turkey (Türkiye)
Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT05742672. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.