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Health
Problems
Cancer
Research
Acupressure for nausea
following chemotherapy
Acupressure may offer
breast cancer patients help in alleviating the nausea caused by
chemotherapy according to a report from the Institute for Health and
Aging, University of California, San Francisco, USA.
The researchers at the
Institute recorded differences in nausea frequency and intensity in women
undergoing chemotherapy for breast cancer between those patients who
received standard care and those who received standard care together with
acupressure treatment.
All of the women were
attending an outpatient oncology clinic in a major teaching medical center
and a private outpatient oncology practice. In all, seventeen women agreed
to participate in the study. The typical participant was 49.5 years old
(SD = 6.0), Caucasian (59%), not married/partnered (76%), on disability
(53%), born a U.S. citizen (76%), and heterosexual (88%); lived alone
(59%); had at least graduated from high school (100%); and had an annual
personal income of $50,000 or greater (65%).
The acupressure treatment
given involved finger acupressure bilaterally at the acupressure points P6
and ST36, which are located on the forearm and by the knee. Baseline and
poststudy questionnaires plus a daily log were used to collect data.
Nausea experience was measured by the Rhodes inventory of
Nausea, Vomiting, and
Retching and nausea intensity.
The results revealed
significant differences between the women who received acupressure
treatment and those who didn't. Within the first 10 days of the
chemotherapy cycle, the women who received acupressure treatment had
reported less intensity and experience of nausea.
The researchers concluded
that finger acupressure may decrease nausea among women undergoing
chemotherapy for breast cancer. However, as this was a relatively
small-scale study, it is difficult to draw firm conclusions and the report
recommends a larger study would be warranted to explore the possibility of
including acupressure treatments in cancer clinics on a large scale.
Source: Oncol Nurs Forum
2000 Jan-Feb;27(1):41-7 .Acupressure for nausea: results of a pilot
study.Dibble SL, Chapman J, Mack KA, Shih AS
© The Internet Health
Library 2000
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