| Literature DB >> 29463240 |
W Schmid1,2, J H Rosland3,4, S von Hofacker3,5, I Hunskår6,7, F Bruvik7,8.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The use of music as therapy in multidisciplinary end-of-life care dates back to the 1970s and nowadays music therapy (MT) is one of the most frequently used complementary therapy in in-patient palliative care in the US. However existing research investigated music therapy's potential impact mainly from one perspective, referring to either a quantitative or qualitative paradigm. The aim of this review is to provide an overview of the users' and providers' perspectives on music therapy in palliative care within one research article.Entities:
Keywords: Interventions; Music therapy; Pain; Palliative care; Patient reported outcomes; Physical comfort
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29463240 PMCID: PMC5819707 DOI: 10.1186/s12904-018-0286-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Palliat Care ISSN: 1472-684X Impact factor: 3.234
Search strategy
| 1. palliative care/ or terminal care/ or hospice care/ or terminally ill/ | |
| 2. palliative care.mp. or exp. Palliative Care/ | |
| 3. terminal care.mp. or Terminal Care/ | |
| 4. exp. Hospice Care/ | |
| 5. Hospice Care.mp. or Hospice Care/ | |
| 6. exp. Terminally Ill/ | |
| 7. terminally ill.mp. or Terminally Ill/ | |
| 8. hospice*.tw. | |
| 9. (palliat* or (terminal* adj6 ill*) or (terminal* adj3 care) or (end adj3 life)).tw. | |
| 10. ((care adj5 dying) or (caring adj5 dying) or (support$ adj5 dying) or (dying adj5 patient$)).tw. | |
| 11. 1 or 2 or 3 or 4 or 5 or 6 or 7 or 8 or 9 or 10 | |
| 12. music therapy.mp. or exp. Music Therapy/ | |
| 13. music*.mp. | |
| 14. melody.mp. | |
| 15. (music$ or melod$).tw. | |
| 16. (sing or sings or singer$ or singing or song$).tw. | |
| 17. 12 or 13 or 14 or 15 or 16 | |
| 18. 11 and 17 | |
| 19. protocol*.tw. | |
| 20. 18 not 19 | |
| 21. limit 18 to yr. = “1978 -Current” |
Inclusion and exclusion criteria applied to the literature search
| Inclusion criteria | Exclusion criteria |
|---|---|
| *Use of music either played live or playback without a certified music therapist present (music medicine) | |
| *Assorted patient-centered music therapy techniques might be utilized, and include receptive, creative, recreative, as well as combined techniques. | * Protocols; feasibility studies; single case studies |
| * Research articles (el. peer-reviewed articles published in) in English, German or Scandinavian language | * Official reports, book reviews; theoretical articles, dissertations; conference abstracts and editorials. |
| *Both qualitative and quantitative studies | * Articles before 1978 |
Fig. 1PRISMA Flow Diagram (attached)
Quantitative studies
| Author | Participants | Intervention | Control | Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Design RCT | ||||
| Warth, et al. [ | MTs × 2 | Listened to a verbal relaxation exercise | Subjective improved relaxation, well-being and fatigue-subscale. Increase in high-frequency oscillations of the heart rate. MT was not found to contribute to acute pain reduction. | |
| Gutgsell, et al. [ | MTs × 1, therapist-guided relaxation | Relax no instructions | Decline of pain | |
| Clements-Cortes [ | MTs Individualized | Individualized taped MTs | Pain reduction and enhancement of physical comfort. | |
| Horne-Thompson & Grocke, [ | MTs ×1 Individualized active and receptive | Volunteer visit | Reduction in anxiety, pain, tiredness and drowsiness. | |
| Hilliard, [ | MTs × 2 (− 13) individualized | TAU | Improved QoL | |
| Pre-Post Design | ||||
| Domingo et al. [ | MTs × 4 in group individualized music/songwriting | TAU | Effect emotional distress and well-being. | |
| Nakayama et al. [ | MT Small group with mainly receptive method. | No | Lowering of salivary cortisol levels | |
| Gallagher et al. [ | N = 200 | MTs × 1 individualized | No | Improvements in anxiety, body movement, facial expression, mood, pain, shortness of breath, and verbalizations. |
| Krout, [ | N = 80 | MTs × 1 individualized active and receptive | No | Effect in observed and self-reported pain control, physical comfort, and relaxation. |
MTs Music therapy session, TAU treatment as usual
Qualitative studies
| Author | Design | Participants | Intervention | Results: Participant’s experiences categorized in themes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Clements-Cortes, [ | Cross-case analysis; Thematic analysis | 4 individuals 63–91 years Inpatient | Patient- centered Individualized MT (24–35 sessions), 14–20 weeks | (1) love, (2) loss, (3) gratitude, (4) growth/transformation, (5) courage/strength, and (6) good-bye. |
| O’Callaghan, [ | Grounded Theory; thematic analysis with ATLAS.ti | 128 individuals 16–101 years Inpatient | At least one patient centered MTs in individual and group setting. | MT can elicit (1) varied affective responses, (2) shifts in physical awareness, (3) rediscovered or new self-awareness. Music can be associated with (4) experiencing altered or improved awareness, (5) increased well-being, (6) human relationships, (7) or does “nothing” to some. |
| Teut, M. et al., [ | Grounded Theory; thematic analysis with MAXQDA | 8 individuals 51–82 years Inpatient | Up to 5 individual MT sessions weekly. Focus on somatic listening applying a Body Tambura. | (1) Relaxing and calming effects, (2) sensations that the body feels lighter, and (3) the provocation of peaceful images or visualizations. |
MT Music therapy
Outcome quantitative studies
| Outcome | Effect | Study |
|---|---|---|
| Well being (VAS) | Effect | Domingo et al. [ |
| Emotional distress (HADS) | Effect | Domingo et al. [ |
| Pain and asthensia (sub scale) | No differances between groups | Domingo et al. [ |
| Acute Pain (SR-VAR) | No differances between groups | Warth et al. [ |
| Well-being (VAS-SR) | Effect | Warth et al. [ |
| Relaxation, ((VAS) SR) | Effect | Warth et al. [ |
| Heart rate variability | Effect | Warth et al. [ |
| Health related quality of life (QLQ-C15-PAL) | No difference between groups | Warth et al. [ |
| QoL – Fatigue (QLQ-C15-PAL) | Effect | Warth et al. [ |
| The FLACC Scale (pain observation) | No differences between groups | Gutgsell et al. [ |
| Numeric rating scale pain (SR) | Effect | Gutgsell et al. [ |
| The Functional Pain Scale (SR interview) | Effect | Gutgsell et al. [ |
| Present Pain Intensity | No differences between groups | Clements-Cortes [ |
| McGill Pain questionnaire | No differences between groups | Clements-Cortes [ |
| Physical comfort (VAS SR) | No differences between groups | Clements-Cortes [ |
| Pain perception (VAS- SR) | No differences between groups | Clements-Cortes [ |
| S-cotisol level | Effect | Nakayama et al. [ |
| The Mood Inventory Scale -Fatigue | No effect | Nakayama et al. [ |
| The Mood Inventory Scale -refreshment (SR) | Effect | Nakayama et al. [ |
| The Mood Inventory Scale -anxiety/ depression | Effect | Nakayama et al. [ |
| ESAS Anxiety (SR) | Effect | Horne-Thompson & Grocke [ |
| Pulse oximeter for heartrate | No differences between groups | Horne-Thompson & Grocke [ |
| ESAS Tiredness, drowsiness, pain (SR) | Effect | Horne-Thompson& Grocke [ |
| ESAS Nausea, depression, appetite, well-being, Shortness of breath | No differences between groups | Horne-Thompson & Grocke [ |
| Shortness of breath (VAS) | Effect | Gallagher et al. [ |
| Mood, depression, anxiety, (VAS-SR) | Effect | Gallagher et al. [ |
| Pain (VAS) | Effect | Gallagher et al., [ |
| Facial, movement and verbal (by therapist) | Effect | Gallagher et al. [ |
| Length of life | No differences between groups | Hilliard [ |
| Hospice QoL -functional well-being (SR) | No differences between groups | Hilliard [ |
| Hospice QoL –psychophysiological well-being | Effect | Hilliard [ |
| Hospice QoL -social/spiritual | No differences between groups | Hilliard [ |
| Palliative Performance Scale (spl R) | No differences between groups | Hilliard [ |
| Pain control (observed SR) | Effect | Krout [ |
| Relaxation (observed SR) | Effect | Krout [ |
| Physical comfort (observed SR) | Effect | Krout [ |