Bradt Joke, Dileo Cheryl, Shim Minjung
Department of Creative Arts Therapies, College of Nursing and Health Professions, Drexel University, Philadelphia, PA, USA.
Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2013 Jun 6;2013(6):CD006908. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD006908.pub2.
Patients awaiting surgical procedures often experience significant anxiety. Such anxiety may result in negative physiological manifestations, slower wound healing, increased risk of infection, and may complicate the induction of anaesthesia and impede postoperative recovery. To reduce patient anxiety, sedatives and anti-anxiety drugs are regularly administered before surgery. However, these often have negative side effects and may prolong patient recovery. Therefore, increasing attention is being paid to a variety of non-pharmacological interventions for reduction of preoperative anxiety such as music therapy and music medicine interventions. Interventions are categorized as 'music medicine' when passive listening to pre-recorded music is offered by medical personnel. In contrast, music therapy requires the implementation of a music intervention by a trained music therapist, the presence of a therapeutic process, and the use of personally tailored music experiences. A systematic review was needed to gauge the efficacy of both music therapy and music medicine interventions for reduction of preoperative anxiety.
To examine the effects of music interventions with standard care versus standard care alone on preoperative anxiety in surgical patients.
We searched the Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials (CENTRAL) (The Cochrane Library 2012, Issue 7), MEDLINE (1950 to August 2012), CINAHL (1980 to August 2012), AMED (1985 to April 2011; we no longer had access to AMED after this date), EMBASE (1980 to August 2012), PsycINFO (1967 to August 2012), LILACS (1982 to August 2012), Science Citation Index (1980 to August 2012), the specialist music therapy research database (March 1 2008; database is no longer functional), CAIRSS for Music (to August 2012), Proquest Digital Dissertations (1980 to August 2012), ClinicalTrials.gov (2000 to August 2012), Current Controlled Trials (1998 to August 2012), and the National Research Register (2000 to September 2007). We handsearched music therapy journals and reference lists, and contacted relevant experts to identify unpublished manuscripts. There was no language restriction.
We included all randomized and quasi-randomized trials that compared music interventions and standard care with standard care alone for reducing preoperative anxiety in surgical patients.
Two review authors independently extracted the data and assessed the risk of bias. We contacted authors to obtain missing data where needed. Where possible, results were presented in meta analyses using mean differences and standardized mean differences. Post-test scores were used. In cases of significant baseline differences, we used change scores.
We included 26 trials (2051 participants). All studies used listening to pre-recorded music. The results suggested that music listening may have a beneficial effect on preoperative anxiety. Specifically, music listening resulted, on average, in an anxiety reduction that was 5.72 units greater (95% CI -7.27 to -4.17, P < 0.00001) than that in the standard care group as measured by the Stait-Trait Anxiety Inventory (STAI-S), and -0.60 standardized units (95% CI -0.90 to -0.31, P < 0.0001) on other anxiety scales. The results also suggested a small effect on heart rate and diastolic blood pressure, but no support was found for reductions in systolic blood pressure, respiratory rate, and skin temperature. Most trials were assessed to be at high risk of bias because of lack of blinding. Blinding of outcome assessors is often impossible in music therapy and music medicine studies that use subjective outcomes, unless in studies in which the music intervention is compared to another treatment intervention. Because of the high risk of bias, these results need to be interpreted with caution.None of the studies included wound healing, infection rate, time to discharge, or patient satisfaction as outcome variables. One large study found that music listening was more effective than the sedative midazolam in reducing preoperative anxiety and equally effective in reducing physiological responses. No adverse effects were identified.
AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: This systematic review indicates that music listening may have a beneficial effect on preoperative anxiety. These findings are consistent with the findings of three other Cochrane systematic reviews on the use of music interventions for anxiety reduction in medical patients. Therefore, we conclude that music interventions may provide a viable alternative to sedatives and anti-anxiety drugs for reducing preoperative anxiety.
等待外科手术的患者常常会经历显著的焦虑。这种焦虑可能导致负面的生理表现、伤口愈合缓慢、感染风险增加,还可能使麻醉诱导复杂化并阻碍术后恢复。为了减轻患者的焦虑,术前通常会使用镇静剂和抗焦虑药物。然而,这些药物常常有负面副作用,可能会延长患者的恢复时间。因此,人们越来越关注各种用于减轻术前焦虑的非药物干预措施,如音乐疗法和音乐医学干预。当医护人员提供预先录制好的音乐供患者被动聆听时,这种干预被归类为“音乐医学”。相比之下,音乐疗法需要由经过培训的音乐治疗师实施音乐干预、存在治疗过程以及使用个性化定制的音乐体验。需要进行一项系统评价来评估音乐疗法和音乐医学干预减轻术前焦虑的疗效。
探讨音乐干预联合标准护理与单纯标准护理相比,对手术患者术前焦虑的影响。
我们检索了Cochrane对照试验中心注册库(CENTRAL)(《Cochrane图书馆》2012年第7期)、MEDLINE(1950年至2012年8月)、CINAHL(1980年至2012年8月)、AMED(1985年至2011年4月;在此日期之后我们无法再访问AMED)、EMBASE(1980年至2012年八月)、PsycINFO(1967年至2012年8月)、LILACS(1982年至2012年8月)、科学引文索引(1980年至2012年8月)、专业音乐疗法研究数据库(2008年3月1日;该数据库已不再可用)、CAIRSS for Music(截至2012年8月)、Proquest数字学位论文数据库(1980年至2012年8月)、ClinicalTrials.gov(2000年至2012年8月)、当前对照试验库(1998年至2012年8月)以及国家研究注册库(2000年至2007年9月)。我们手工检索了音乐疗法期刊和参考文献列表,并联系了相关专家以识别未发表的手稿。没有语言限制。
我们纳入了所有比较音乐干预联合标准护理与单纯标准护理以减轻手术患者术前焦虑的随机和半随机试验。
两位综述作者独立提取数据并评估偏倚风险。如有需要我们联系作者以获取缺失数据。在可能的情况下,结果以使用均数差和标准化均数差的Meta分析呈现。使用的是测试后分数。在基线差异显著的情况下,我们使用变化分数。
我们纳入了26项试验(2051名参与者)。所有研究均使用聆听预先录制好的音乐。结果表明,聆听音乐可能对术前焦虑有有益影响。具体而言,通过状态 -特质焦虑量表(STAI - S)测量,聆听音乐导致的焦虑减轻平均比标准护理组多5.72个单位(95%CI -7.27至 -4.17,P < 0.00001),在其他焦虑量表上为 -0.60个标准化单位(95%CI -0.90至 -0.31,P < 0.0001)。结果还表明对心率和舒张压有较小影响,但未发现对收缩压、呼吸频率和皮肤温度有降低作用。由于缺乏盲法,大多数试验被评估为存在高偏倚风险。在使用主观结果的音乐疗法和音乐医学研究中,除非音乐干预与另一种治疗干预进行比较的研究,否则结果评估者的盲法通常是不可能的。由于高偏倚风险,这些结果需要谨慎解释。没有研究将伤口愈合、感染率、出院时间或患者满意度作为结局变量纳入。一项大型研究发现,聆听音乐在减轻术前焦虑方面比镇静剂咪达唑仑更有效,在减轻生理反应方面效果相同。未发现不良反应。
本系统评价表明,聆听音乐可能对术前焦虑有有益影响。这些发现与其他三项关于使用音乐干预减轻医学患者焦虑的Cochrane系统评价的结果一致。因此,我们得出结论,音乐干预可能为减轻术前焦虑提供一种可行的替代镇静剂和抗焦虑药物的方法。