| Literature DB >> 31143552 |
Hsin-Hui Lin1, Yu-Chen Chang1, Hsiao-Hui Chou1, Chih-Po Chang1, Ming-Yuan Huang2, Shu-Jung Liu3, Chin-Han Tsai4, Wei-Te Lei5,6, Tzu-Lin Yeh7,8.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Anxiety is commonly experienced during the delivery process and has shown to have adverse effects on maternal and infant health outcomes. Music interventions tend to reduce the effects of anxiety in diverse populations, are low cost, are easily accessible, and have high acceptability. The aim of this review and meta-analysis was to assess the effectiveness of music interventions in reducing anxiety levels among women during labor.Entities:
Keywords: Anxiety; Labor; Music; Pregnancy; Stress
Year: 2019 PMID: 31143552 PMCID: PMC6525590 DOI: 10.7717/peerj.6945
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PeerJ ISSN: 2167-8359 Impact factor: 2.984
Characteristics of randomized controlled trials investigating the effect of music intervention on anxiety during labor.
| Study | Country | Participants | Age (Mean ± SD) (I vs. C) | I:C | Intervention | Outcome measures | Findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Iran | 60 low-risk pregnant women, ASA class I and II undergoing elective CS | 27.1 ± 4.94 vs. 26.6 ± 5.59 | 30:30 | The “Motivation” piece, a sedative musical piece, was played through a headphone during the surgery | STAI before and after OP | Significant differences between STAI in music (21.83 ± 11.9 vs. 13 ± 8.02) and control groups (24.4 ± 11.89 vs. 16.6 ± 8.14) pre and post-test ( | |
| Germany | 304 low-risk pregnant women undergoing primary CS | 33.5 ± 5.4 vs. 33.7 ± 5.4 | 154:150 | Slow tempo music from one (15 tracks) of four self -selected genres via loudspeakers started when entering the OR | VAS-A, STAI, salivary cortisol and salivary alpha amylase at admission, skin suture, and 2 h after OP; HR, SBP and DBP at skin incision and 2 h after OP | At skin suture, significantly lower STAI ( | |
| Turkey | 50 low-risk primigravid women | NR | 25:25 | Music was played in Acemasiran mode with earplugs for 3 h (20 min of listening with 10-min breaks) during the active phase | STAI, faces anxiety scale 30 min after intervention, RR, HR, SBP, DBP, dilatation, effacement, fetal HR, period of contraction, frequency of contraction at the end of 1st, 3rd, 5th, 7th h of labor | The women who listened to music during labor had lower anxiety levels, evaluated the labor as easier, had longer periods of contraction, and their labor progressed faster | |
| China | 119 low-risk primigravid women, singleton, and expected to have NSD | 25.57 ± 3.11 vs. 26.02 ± 2.90 | 60:59 | Relaxing, soft and regular rhythmic music recommended to participants was played with a 20-min break for every 2 h during the active phase | VAS-A (1, 4, 8, 16, 24 h after intervention) | VAS-A scores significantly different from those in the controls at all-time points (all | |
| India | 60 primigravid women who were in the active phase of labor | NR | 30:30 | Music was administered in the first stage of labor | Zung’s SAS (pre-test and post-test) | The mean post-test score of anxiety between the experimental and control groups was 40.01 ( | |
| Turkey | 132 low-risk primigravid women, singleton, expected to have NSD | 25.06 ± 4.33 vs. 25.09 ± 4.53 | 67:65 | Self-selected music (relaxing, regular rhythmic patterns) were played all the time with 20-min break for every h via headphones since two cm cervical dilatation to first 2 h of the active phase | VAS-A, SBP, DBP, HR (before music, latent phase, active phase, second stage and 2 h postpartum); analgesic requirement | A significantly lower level of anxiety ( | |
| Turkey | 141 low-risk primigravid women, singleton, expected to have NSD | 24.17 ± 3.22 vs. 23.39 ± 3.88 | 71:70 | Self-selected music (relaxing, regular rhythmic) played all the time with a 20-min break for every 2 h since two cm cervical dilatation to the end of the third stage | VAS-A (1, 4, 8, 16, 24 h postpartum), VAS-S (2, 12, 24 h postpartum) | Significantly lower postpartum anxiety at all-time intervals (1, 4, 8, 16, and 24 h, | |
| Israel | 60 low-risk pregnant women, undergoing an elective CS for medical reasons only | 32.0 ± 3.97 vs. 32.13 ± 4.79 | 28:32 | Patient-preferred music (light classical music or Israeli tunes) were played for 40 min, using a Discman with earphones, while lying on their beds before OP | 1. Mood states scale | Significant increase in positive emotions and a significant decline in negative emotions and perceived threat of the situation. Significant reduction in SBP, increase in DBP and RR | |
| China | 60 low-risk pregnant women, ASA class I and II, undergoing elective CS | NR | 30:30 | Self-chosen Chinese classical music was played for 30 min before OP and was continued after anesthesia | The Zung’s SAS, total power, LF, HF, and LF/HF ratio in HRV (at the preoperative visit and just before OP) | The mean HRV was significantly less, the mean HF value was significantly increased, and the mean anxiety score was significantly decreased | |
| United States | 50 low-risk pregnant women, undergoing an elective CS, singleton | NR | 25:25 | Self-selected music provided through MP3 player with programmed genres of music administered for 30 min prior to and after their CS | STAI after intervention | The intervention of patient-selected music before and after CS will reduce the anxiety levels in the patients undergoing CS ( | |
| Taiwan | 60 low-risk primigravid women, singleton, expected to have NSD | 26.63 ± 4.02 vs. 27.60 ± 4.34 | 30:30 | Self-chosen music (include classical, light, popular, crystal, or Chinese religious music) was played at least 30 min during the latent phase and active phase | VAS-A, finger temperature (before and after 30 min of music listening during the latent and active phases) | The experimental group had significantly lower pain, anxiety and a higher finger temperature during the latent phase | |
| Iran | 100 low-risk pregnant women, ASA class I, undergoing elective CS under general anesthesia | 26 ± 5.19 vs. 25 ± 4.23 | 50:50 | Intra-OP music (soft instrumental, including 15 segments of a Spanish style guitar not selected by the patients) | VAS-A immediately in PACU and at 0.5, 1, 2, 4, and 6 h postoperatively | There were no significant differences in terms of the post-OP anxiety in PACU and at 0.5, 1, 2, and 4 h post-OP | |
| Taiwan | 64 low-risk pregnant women, undergoing elective CS, singleton, received spinal or epidural anesthesia | 30.31 ± 4.16 vs. 32.31 ± 4.48 | 32:32 | Self-selected music (Western classical, new age, or Chinese religious music) administered for at least 30 min from the start of anesthesia until the end of OP | VAS-A, SpO2, finger temperature, RR, HR, SBP, DBP prior to anesthesia, the end of maternal contact with the neonate, and after completion of the skin suture | Significantly lower anxiety level and a higher level of satisfaction regarding the CS. No significant differences were found between the two groups in any of the physiological indexes | |
| Korea | 50 low-risk pregnant women undergoing an elective CS | 28.1 ± 7.0 vs. 29.7 ± 5.1 | 25:25 | Patients wore the headphones as soon as they entered the OR and listened to the music (the Four Seasons Vivaldi and other five songs (e.g., lullaby–Mozart) three times repeat) | SBP, DBP, HR, intra-OP awareness, post-OP explicit and implicit memory, plasma cortisol (1 min before, 1 min after, 3 min after intubation; 1 min after, 10 min after delivery; 5 min after extubation) | Music significantly decreased SBP and HR at 1 min after intubation and 5 min after extubation, increased hit ratio of the implicit memory test, decreased cortisol at 30 min after intubation and 10 min after arriving in the recovery room |
Notes:
ASA, American Society for Anesthesiology; C, control; CS, caesarian section; DBP, diastolic blood pressure; h, hour; HF, low-frequency power; HR, heart rate; HRV, heart rate variability; I, intervention; LF, low-frequency power; min, minute; NR, not reported; NSD, normal spontaneous delivery; OP, operation; OR, operation room; PACU, post-anesthesia care unit; RR, respiratory rate; SAS, self-rating anxiety scale; SBP, systolic blood pressure; SpO2, pulse hemoglobin oxygen saturation; STAI, state-trait anxiety inventory; VAS, visual analog scale; VAS-A, VAS for anxiety; VAS-S, VAS for satisfaction.
Studies included in meta-analysis.
Figure 1Schematic illustration of the literature search and the study selection criteria.
CINAH, the cumulative index to nursing and allied health; NTLTD, the net worked digital library of theses and dissertations.
Figure 2Forest plot of pooled anxiety scores after the intervention between the music intervention group and the placebo group (Overall meta-analysis).
Figure 3Forest plot of pooled anxiety scores after the intervention between the music intervention group and the placebo group (Subgroup analysis by methods of delivery).
Figure 4Forest plot of pooled anxiety scores after the intervention between the music intervention group and the placebo group (Subgroup analysis by music types).
Figure 5Forest plot of heart rate after the intervention between the music intervention group and the placebo group.
Figure 6Forest plot of systolic blood pressure after the intervention between the music intervention group and the placebo group.
Figure 7Forest plot of diastolic blood pressure after the intervention between the music intervention group and the placebo group.
Figure 8Regression of anxiety scores on Age.