| Literature DB >> 33131627 |
Ashley J Farrar1, Francisca C Farrar2.
Abstract
Clinical aromatherapy is an alternative medicine therapy that can be beneficial in the inpatient or outpatient setting for symptom management for pain, nausea, general well-being, anxiety, depression, stress, and insomnia. It is beneficial for preoperative anxiety, oncology, palliative care, hospice, and end of life. Essential oils can be dangerous and toxic, with some being flammable, causing skin dermatitis, being phototoxic with risk of a chemical burn, or causing oral toxicity or death. The article investigates history, supporting theories, guidelines, plant sources, safety, pathophysiologic responses, and clinical nursing aromatherapy. Recommendations for developing a best practice clinical nursing aromatherapy program are provided. Published by Elsevier Inc.Entities:
Keywords: Best practice model; Clinical aromatherapy; Clinical management; History; Pathologic response; Plant sources; Safety case reports; Theoretic frameworks
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33131627 PMCID: PMC7520654 DOI: 10.1016/j.cnur.2020.06.015
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nurs Clin North Am ISSN: 0029-6465 Impact factor: 1.208
Historical evolution
| Country | Cultural Therapy |
|---|---|
| Egyptian culture | Resins, balms, and fragrant oils |
| Iraq | A skeleton was found 30,000 years ago with concentration of extracted plant essential oils. |
| India | The Ayurveda natural system of medicine was based on disease due to an imbalance of stress in a person’s consciousness. |
| China | Shen Nung’s manuscript listed 350 plants in 2800 |
| Greece | Theophrastus inherited the botanic garden from Aristotle. He wrote a book about specific uses and formulas for aromatics. |
| Arabia | Ibn Sina, an Arabic physician, used aromatics, such as senna, camphor, and cloves, for medical treatment. |
| German | Hieronymus Braunschweig a surgeon and botanist, wrote a book on distillation of oils from plants that included 25 oils |
| France | In 1919, Gattefossé, a famous chemist, was burned in an explosion in his laboratory. The wounds became infected. Wound rinsing with essential oils eradicated the infection. He coined the term, aromatherapy, and was known for the medical use of essential oils with their antibacterial and healing properties of essential oils. |
Nursing theoretic frameworks for health care aromatherapy
| Theorist Name | Application to Clinical Practice |
|---|---|
| Florence Nightingale | Cleanliness, rest, and relaxation properties |
| Myra Estrin Levine | Transformation process preventing stress |
| Hildegard Peplau | Supports interpersonal relations; promotes personal growth |
| Martha Rogers | Interrelationship between people and plants |
| Sister Callista Roy | Assist coping and adaptation |
| Wanda de Aguilar Horta | Restore balance, thereby decreasing depression and stress |
| Promote holistic patient comfort | |
| Jean Watson | Holistic harmony caring interactive healing relationship such as massage and talk |