Incorporating Music Therapy With Acupuncture in Managing Cancer Pain at an Acupuncture Practice.
Study Goal
The researchers aimed to compare the effectiveness of acupuncture-only therapy versus dual therapy (acupuncture and music therapy) in reducing pain intensity in cancer patients.
Results Summary
Both acupuncture-only and dual therapy groups showed clinically and statistically significant improvements in pain intensity scores, with no significant difference between the two groups. Each intervention was found effective for managing cancer-related pain.
Population
102 participants at a private acupuncture practice with cancer-related pain.
Effective Dosage
Not specified
Duration
Six weeks
Interactions
None mentioned
| Intervention | Direction | Endpoint | Population | Dosage | Impact | Claim # |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
acupuncture-only therapy | decrease | pain intensity scores | patients with cancer | - | had clinically and statistically significant improvements | #1 |
dual therapy (acupuncture and music therapy) | decrease | pain intensity scores | patients with cancer | - | had clinically and statistically significant improvements | #2 |
acupuncture and music therapy | decrease | cancer-related pain | patients with cancer | - | were each found to be effective | #3 |
acupuncture-only therapy versus dual therapy (acupuncture and music therapy) | no change | pain intensity scores | patients with cancer | - | a significant difference was not noted | #4 |
BACKGROUND: Complementary and alternative medicine encompasses various nonpharmacologic interventions for managing pain, such as acupuncture and music therapy. Few studies have combined these two interventions in the management of cancer-related pain. OBJECTIVES: The purpose of this evidence-based project was to compare acupuncture-only therapy versus dual therapy (acupuncture and music therapy) on pain intensity scores in patients with cancer. METHODS: This evidence-based project included 102 participants at a private acupuncture practice. One group had acupuncture only for six weeks, and another had six weeks of acupuncture and music therapy. The Numeric Pain Rating Scale was used to assess pain before and after the interventions. FINDINGS: Findings showed that both groups had clinically and statistically significant improvements in pain intensity scores. Although a significant difference was not noted between the two groups, acupuncture and music therapy were each found to be effective for managing cancer-related pain.