Music Therapy in the Treatment of Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease
Açar sözlər
Mücərrəd
Təsvir
This study examines the effect of a multimodal psycho-music therapy intervention on respiratory symptoms (dyspnea), depression, and quality of life of patients with pulmonary disease during Pumonary Rehabilitation, in the combined effort of two departments of Mount Sinai Beth Israel: The Alice Lawrence Center for Health and Rehabilitation and The Louis Armstrong Center for Music and Medicine
1. Desing The study cohort included patient with at least moderate COPD according to the GOLD classification as well as other chronic disabling respiratory diseases. Inclusion criteria were defined as being enrolled in a Pulmonary Rehabilitation (PR) program as well as the ability to attend music therapy sessions at least once a week for 5 of 6 weekly sessions. The patients were required to be medically stable simultaneously allowing them to participate in the pulmonary rehabilitation program. Standard, routine pulmonary rehabilitative medical care was used as the control to music therapy plus PR and patient selection was provided by a computer generated randomization protocol. The intervention included live music listening with visualization, wind playing and singing undertaken to study their effects on perceived dyspnea, depression and quality of life. Patients were allowed to choose between easy to play wind instruments i.e recorder, slide whistle, harmonica, etc. and instructed on their use. Ninety- eight subjects were evaluated as potential candidates for the study. Thirty of them were excluded because they would not commit to participate in the required number of music therapy sessions either due to the anticipated time commitment or personal/medical concerns. The 68 patients who agreed to participate in the investigation (Age Mean: 70.1), were randomize and 38 were allocated to the treatment group and 30 to the control group. These 68 patients who were newly enrolled in the Alice Lawrence Center had voluntarily sought to participate active PR through advertising and flyers posted in the community and throughout the hospital and affiliated office practices. The weekly music therapy sessions lasted 45 min, for a period of 6 weeks, in groups of 6 participants or less.
2- Method At the beginning and end of each session the patients were asked to score the intensity of current breathlessness by drawing a circle on different pictures of lungs that represented extent of dyspnea (VAS) These recorded measures would be collected at the end of each session, in order to evaluate the subjective effect of the treatment on the patients perception of dyspnea. CRQ and BDI were also administered at the beginning of the PR program and subsequently at 6 weeks, the end of the PR program. In the music therapy group, every session included music visualizations, wind instrument playing, and singing, providing direct methods of working with the breath control and offering active music-making experiences to support optimal breathing, foster self-expression, and increase opportunities for coping with the challenges of chronic respiratory disease.
3-Outcome measures
Primary outcomes were depressive symptoms, disease-specific quality of life factors, and patients' perceived dyspnea:
- Depressive symptoms were evaluated using the Beck Depression Inventory 2nd edition-Fast Screen (BDI-FS), a 7-item subscale of the BDI-II. The BDI-FS measures signs and symptoms such as sadness, pessimism, past failure, anhedonia, self-dislike, self-criticalness, and suicidal thoughts or ideation.
- Disease-specific quality of life as measured by the Chronic Respiratory Questionnaire Self-Reported (CRQ-SR) is divided into four dimensions of dyspnea, fatigue, emotional function and mastery, with a 7-point Likert scale response for each question. Dyspnea relates to a patient's symptoms of shortness of breath and difficulty breathing. Mastery relates to a patient's sense of having control over his or her disease and symptoms. Emotion relates to a patient's general mood. Fatigue relates to a patient's energy level. We measured CRQ-SR domain scores at the time of enrolment in the study and again at completion, immediately following the final session after six weeks).
- Visual Analogue Scale (VAS) scale. This measures perceived dyspnea or breathlessness in participants during the music therapy sessions. The VAS is widely used in the measurement of breathlessness as well as other symptoms, e.g. pain, anxiety (annotate to appendix)
4-Statistical analysis Each of the dependent measures of primary outcomes (Depression, Dyspnea, and Health-Related Quality of Life) was analyzed using a generalized linear mixed model (SAS Proc GLIMMIX, SAS 9.3) involving a single between subjects factor (Treatment vs. Control) and a single within subjects factor (Period - enrollment vs. follow up 6 weeks later) Test of Treatment Group differences at Enrollment and at 6 weeks were made using planned contrast on the Least-Square means.
Tarixlər
Son Doğrulandı: | 04/30/2014 |
İlk təqdim: | 05/20/2014 |
Təxmini qeydiyyat təqdim edildi: | 05/21/2014 |
İlk Göndərmə: | 05/22/2014 |
Son Yeniləmə Göndərildi: | 05/21/2014 |
Son Yeniləmə Göndərildi: | 05/22/2014 |
Həqiqi Təhsilin Başlama Tarixi: | 05/31/2008 |
Təxmini İlkin Tamamlanma Tarixi: | 11/30/2012 |
Təxmini İşin Tamamlanma Tarixi: | 11/30/2012 |
Vəziyyət və ya xəstəlik
Müdaxilə / müalicə
Behavioral: Treatment Group - Music Therapy
Faza
Qol Qrupları
Qol | Müdaxilə / müalicə |
---|---|
Experimental: Treatment Group - Music Therapy The experimental group participates in once weekly group music therapy session for 6 weeks using playing of simple wind instruments, singing, and music visualization. The Music therapy session lasts 45 min. and encourages patients to use breathing techniques to achieve a relaxation response. Extructured techniques involving singing, music improvisation supports breath pattens and provides supporting coping styles. The use of wind instruments involves a focus of breathing efficiently and elongating the exhalation to prolong musical tones and transferring breath control. Music Visualization involving deep breathing techniques provides optimal mind-body connection, influences breathing rhythms through more indirect means while reducing stress, accessing altered states and encourages healing imagery. | Behavioral: Treatment Group - Music Therapy |
No Intervention: Standard Pulmonary Rehabilitation Pulmonary rehabilitation is a program to people with chronic lung diseases like COPD, emphysema, and chronic bronchitis lead full, satisfying lives and restore them to their highest functional capacity. Pulmonary rehab is aimed to improve quality of life by:
Decreasing respiratory symptoms and complications Encouraging self-management and control over daily functioning Improving physical conditioning and exercise performance Improving emotional well-being Reducing hospitalizations
Pulmonary rehab programs include:
Medical management Exercise Breathing retraining Education Emotional support Nutrition counseling |
Uyğunluq Kriteriyaları
Təhsil üçün uyğun yaşlar | 45 Years Üçün 45 Years |
Təhsilə Uyğun Cinslər | All |
Sağlam Könüllüləri qəbul edir | Bəli |
Kriteriyalar | Inclusion Criteria: - Patient with at least moderate COPD according to the GOLD classification as well as other chronic disabling respiratory diseases. Inclusion criteria were defined as being enrolled in a Pulmonary Rehabilitation (PR) program as well as the ability to attend music therapy sessions at least once a week for 5 of 6 weekly sessions. - The patients were required to be medically stable simultaneously allowing them to participate in the pulmonary rehabilitation program |
Nəticə
İlkin nəticə tədbirləri
1. Chronic Respiratory Questionnaire Self-Reported (CRQ-SR) [up to six weeks]
2. Beck Depression Inventory 2nd edition-Fast Screen (BDI-FS) [up to six weeks]
3. Perceived dyspnea Visual Analogue Scale (VAS) [Treatment group only. It is administrated prior and post every music therapy session. (6 weeks)]