| Literature DB >> 23799960 |
Martina Ferraresi1, Roberta Clari, Irene Moro, Elena Banino, Enrico Boero, Alessandro Crosio, Romina Dayne, Lorenzo Rosset, Andrea Scarpa, Enrica Serra, Alessandra Surace, Alessio Testore, Nicoletta Colombi, Barbara Giorgina Piccoli.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Complementary and Alternative Medicines (CAMs) are increasingly practiced in the general population; it is estimated that over 30% of patients with chronic diseases use CAMs on a regular basis. CAMs are also used in hospital settings, suggesting a growing interest in individualized therapies. One potential field of interest is pain, frequently reported by dialysis patients, and seldom sufficiently relieved by mainstream therapies. Gentle-touch therapies and Reiki (an energy based touch therapy) are widely used in the western population as pain relievers.By integrating evidence based approaches and providing ethical discussion, this debate discusses the pros and cons of CAMs in the dialysis ward, and whether such approaches should be welcomed or banned. DISCUSSION: In spite of the wide use of CAMs in the general population, few studies deal with the pros and cons of an integration of mainstream medicine and CAMs in dialysis patients; one paper only regarded the use of Reiki and related practices. Widening the search to chronic pain, Reiki and related practices, 419 articles were found on Medline and 6 were selected (1 Cochrane review and 5 RCTs updating the Cochrane review). According to the EBM approach, Reiki allows a statistically significant but very low-grade pain reduction without specific side effects. Gentle-touch therapy and Reiki are thus good examples of approaches in which controversial efficacy has to be balanced against no known side effect, frequent free availability (volunteer non-profit associations) and easy integration with any other pharmacological or non pharmacological therapy. While a classical evidence-based approach, showing low-grade efficacy, is likely to lead to a negative attitude towards the use of Reiki in the dialysis ward, the ethical discussion, analyzing beneficium (efficacy) together with non maleficium (side effects), justice (cost, availability and integration with mainstream therapies) and autonomy (patients' choice) is likely to lead to a permissive-positive attitude.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23799960 PMCID: PMC3694469 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2369-14-129
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Nephrol ISSN: 1471-2369 Impact factor: 2.388
Evidence retrieved on web search engines: quantitative analysis of the first 2 pages of Google and Yahoo
| Reiki | Google | 58500000 | 6/14 | 3 | 6 |
| Yahoo | 44900000 | 6/14 | 6 | ||
| Reiki medicine | Google | 17800000 | 17/3 | 2 | 1 |
| Yahoo | 5690000 | 19/1 | 1 | ||
| Reiki Torino | Google | 3680000 | 18/2 | 0 | 0 |
| Yahoo | 51100 | 10/10 | 0 | ||
| Reiki use | Google | 3060000 | 18/2 | 2 | 0 |
| Yahoo | 55300 | 20/0 | 0 | ||
| Reiki pain | Google | 10700000 | 1/19 | 9 | 4 |
| Yahoo | 7150000 | 2/18 | 4 | ||
| Reiki dialysis | Google | 590000 | 4/16 | 0 | 7 |
| Yahoo | 193000 | 6/14 | 0 | ||
| Reiki cost effectiveness | Google | 333000 | 12/8 | 12 | 5 |
| Yahoo | 112000 | 15/5 | 9 | ||
| Reiki contra- indications | Google | 120000 | 9/11 | 2 | 9 |
| Yahoo | 30900 | 6/14 | 1 |
Legend: * number of links retrieved in first 2 pages in Google and Yahoo.
Characteristics of selected articles
| Review | 24 studies (1153 participants) | VAS, NRS, McGill Pain Index, SF-36, analgesic usage, MPAC, FACT | Touch therapies(TT): Reiki, Healing Touch, Therapeutic Touch | Sham placebo or ’no treatment’ control | Pain (acute or chronic) | Statistically significant reduction of pain with different treatment, especially with Reiki (95% CI: -1.16 to −0.50) | Not evaluated | 7/10 | |
| RCT | n=90 elderly patients with post-surgical pain: n=30 non-contact therapeutic touch, n=30 metronome treatment, n=30 no treatment | VAS, MPAC,TAS,HAT,pupil size | Reiki | Routine care, placebo | Post-operative pain | Statistically significant reduction of pain in the Reiki group, worsening of pain in the metronome group (p<0.01) | Not reported | 7.5/10 | |
| RCT, not blinded | n= 290 patients (mean age 64) undergoing first time elective coronary artery bypass surgery n=237 at the end of the study | MEDD, STAI | Healing Touch | Visitors and no intervention | Post-operative pain, anxiety, physical and mental status, length of stay | Significant reduction of hospital stay and anxiety. No significant reduction of pain | Not reported | 7.5/10 | |
| RCT, patients, data collection staff and data analyst blinded | n= 82 females undergoing Stereotactic Core Breast Biopsy: n=42 intervention, n=40 placebo | VAS | Therapeutic Touch (TT) | Sham Reiki | Post-biopsy pain, lidocaine/ epinephrine dosage | Increase of pain in both groups, not statistically significant | Increase of pain in both groups | 7.5/10 | |
| RCT, patients, data collection staff and data analyst blinded | n=100 adults with fibromyalgia (23 real direct Reiki: 24= real distant Reiki, 23= sham direct Reiki, 23=sham distant Reiki) | VAS | Reiki | Sham Reiki | Pain, fatigue, sleep quality, well-being | Neither Reiki nor touch improve the symptoms of fibromyalgia in all groups | Not reported | 7.5/10 | |
| RCT | n= 90 patients with cancer and normal level of consciousness, age 15–65: n=30 TT, n=30 placebo, n=30 control | VAS, RFS | Therapeutic Touch (TT) | Mimic therapeutic touch and no intervention | Pain, fatigue | Statistically significant decrease in pain and fatigue in TT vs placebo or control (p=0.04) | Excess energy and anxiety in both groups | 8/10 |
Legend: RCT Randomized Controlled Trial, VAS Visual Analogue Scale, NRS Numeric Rating Score, SF-36 questionnaire for health-related quality of life, MPAC Memorial Pain Assessment Card, FACT Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapy, TAS Tellegen Absorption Scale, HAT Health Attribution Test, MEDD Morphine-Equivalent Dosage, STAI State Trait Anxiety Inventory, RFS Rhoten Fatigue Scale.
Figure 1Flow chart of the papers retrieved. Legend: PICO: Patient/Population, Intervention, Comparison, Outcome, a method of putting together the better search strategy; CINAHL: Cumulative Index to Nursing and Allied Health Literature, a data bank.