William James Center for Research, ISPA - University Institute, Lisbon, Portugal
Department of Rehabilitation Medicine, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington, USA.
BMJ Open. 2021 Jul 5;11(7):e047580. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2020-047580.
Pain is a universal experience and the most common reason for seeking healthcare. Inadequate pain management negatively impacts numerous aspects of patient health. Multidisciplinary treatment programmes, including psychosocial interventions, are more useful for pain management than purely biomedical treatment alone. Recently, researchers showed increasing interest in understanding the role of spirituality/religiosity and spiritual/religious practices on pain experience, with engagement in religious practices, such as prayer, showing to positively impact pain experience in religious individuals. This systematic review will seek to summarise and integrate the existing findings from randomised controlled trials assessing the effects of prayer and prayer-based interventions on pain experience.
The systematic review procedures and its report will follow the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic reviews and Meta-Analyses statement. Electronic searches in nine databases (Web of Science Core Collection, MEDLINE, SCIELO Citation Index, PubMed, Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Clinical Trial, PsycINFO, Scopus, LILACS and Open-SIGLE) will be performed to identify randomised controlled trials of prayer-based interventions. Two independent researchers will assess studies for inclusion and extract data from each paper. Risk of bias assessment will be assessed independently by two reviewers based on the Consolidated Standards of Reporting Trials statement. Qualitative synthesis of the body of research will be conducted using a narrative summary synthesis method. Meta-analysis will be limited to studies reporting on the same primary outcome. Formal searches are planned to start in June 2021. The final report is anticipated to be completed by September 2021.
Findings will be useful to (1) understand the condition of our knowledge in this field and (2) provide evidence for prayer effectiveness in reducing pain intensity and pain-related stress and increasing pain tolerance in adults experiencing acute or chronic pain.
CRD42020221733.
疼痛是一种普遍存在的体验,也是寻求医疗保健的最常见原因。疼痛管理不当会对患者健康的许多方面产生负面影响。多学科治疗方案,包括心理社会干预,比单纯的生物医学治疗更有助于疼痛管理。最近,研究人员越来越关注理解灵性/宗教信仰以及精神/宗教实践对疼痛体验的作用,参与宗教实践,如祈祷,被证明对宗教个体的疼痛体验有积极影响。本系统评价旨在总结和整合评估祈祷和基于祈祷的干预对疼痛体验影响的随机对照试验的现有发现。
系统评价程序及其报告将遵循系统评价和荟萃分析的首选报告项目声明。将在九个数据库(Web of Science 核心合集、MEDLINE、SCIELO 引文索引、PubMed、Cochrane 对照试验中心注册、PsycINFO、Scopus、LILACS 和 Open-SIGLE)中进行电子检索,以确定基于祈祷的干预的随机对照试验。两名独立的研究人员将评估研究的纳入情况,并从每篇论文中提取数据。两名评审员将根据 CONSORT 声明独立评估研究偏倚风险。使用叙述性综合合成方法对研究进行定性综合。仅对报告相同主要结局的研究进行荟萃分析。计划于 2021 年 6 月开始正式检索。预计 2021 年 9 月完成最终报告。
研究结果将有助于(1)了解该领域知识状况,(2)提供祈祷在减轻成人急性或慢性疼痛的疼痛强度和与疼痛相关的应激、增加疼痛耐受力方面的有效性证据。
PROSPERO 注册号:CRD42020221733。