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Auricular Acupuncture on Fatigue, Energy and Well-Being in Intensive Care Nurses

S

Sakarya University

Status

Completed

Conditions

Fatigue

Treatments

Other: Auricular acupuncture

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT05855473
45/08.06.2022

Details and patient eligibility

About

Notably, no acupuncture intervention studies have aimed at reducing the fatigue level and increasing the energy of the nurses working in the ICU. For this reason, this study aims to investigate the effects of auricular acupuncture applied to nurses working in the ICU, who work at a critical point in patient care in our country, work with intense work tempo, experience excessive stress, tension, fatigue, and are open to psychosocial problems such as depression and burnout, on fatigue and energy levels. This study can significantly contribute to the literature on managing the physical and psychosocial issues associated with fatigue and that similar intervention programs can be expanded in working life. This study aimed to determine the effect of auricular acupuncture applied to intensive care nurses on fatigue, energy and well-being. This was a single-blind, randomized controlled clinical study. The study was conducted in three groups: semi-permanent needle acupuncture (intervention), seed acupuncture (intervention), and a control group.

Full description

A stratified randomization method was used to determine intervention, placebo and control groups. It was ensured that the nurses were evenly distributed to the groups according to their age, working year and baseline fatigue scores. A computer-generated (https://www.randomizer.org/) sorting was used to allocate the groups homogeneously.

The intervention groups received five sessions of auricular acupuncture with semi-permanent needles and seeds once a week. Semi-permanent needles and seeds placed in nurses' ear acupuncture points stayed for one week. In the sessions in the following weeks, semi-permanent needles and seeds were replaced with new ones. Nurses were reminded to remove the semi-permanent needle and seed tapes 24 hours before the scheduled session. They are also instructed to remove it beforehand if there is any discomfort, itching or any sign of allergy. Placement of the semi-permanent needles and seed tapes took approximately five minutes per session. Before each session for the semi-permanent needle group, the ears of the participants were cleaned with a 70% alcohol wipe and sterile, fine-caliber, disposable semi-permanent needles were used. A similar application was made to the seed group and they were asked to apply pressure on the bands three times a day, 15 times each time.

These were placed unilaterally on five specific points in the ear (ShenMen, sympathetic, liver, kidney, lung) by a certified specialist in acupuncture using the National Acupuncture Detoxification Association (NADA) protocol. Since the body or organs have an emotional component and can be adversely affected by excessive and prolonged emotions, these ear points were chosen to facilitate the release of negative/toxic emotions from the organs. This process was thought to help the treated participant return to balance and increase energy and well-being by giving a feeling of calm instead of stress and anxiety. Shen men (TF4) and Sympathetic (AH6a) points can regulate the sympathetic and parasympathetic nervous systems to effectively reduce patient tension and anxiety. In addition, the TF4 point reduces anxiety, while the AH6a point calms excessive sympathetic activity. Both of these points help increase parasympathetic activation by balancing the sympathetic/parasympathetic branches of the autonomic nervous system. Low mood and lethargy are improved by stimulating the liver (CO12). Kidney point (CO10) is a point that has a strengthening effect by relieving mental weakness, fatigue and headaches and stimulating kidney functions. Combining these ear acupuncture points can increase the energy and blood flow of the organs, thereby relieving the patient's fatigue.

Data were collected at baseline and at the end of the intervention (week 5) using the Chalder Fatigue Scale, Subjective Vitality Scale, and Well-being Scale.

Enrollment

66 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18 to 65 years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Working as a nurse in the intensive care unit for at least 6 months.
  • No physical disability
  • Those who do not have a neurological diagnosis (having SVO, epilepsy, multiplesclerosis, etc.)
  • No psychiatric diagnosis
  • On the ear skin at the application site; no lesions such as infection, ulcer, irritation, rash, scar and
  • Nurses who volunteered to participate in the study

Exclusion criteria

  • Patients followed up with the diagnosis of end-stage renal disease, COPD, advanced heart failure, chronic liver disease, musculoskeletal problem, hypothyroidism and depression.
  • Those who have physical and mental health problems that prevent communication
  • Bleeding disorder or taking anticoagulant therapy
  • pregnant
  • Nurses who received any medical treatment or applied complementary methods (relaxation exercise, yoga, massage, etc.) during the study

Trial design

Primary purpose

Supportive Care

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Single Blind

66 participants in 3 patient groups

Semi-permanent needle
Experimental group
Description:
Five sessions of unilateral auricular acupuncture were applied alternately to the right and left ears, once a week, to the intensive care nurses in the semi-permanent needle group. Semi-permanent needles placed on the acupuncture points of the nurses' ears remained for one week with adhesive tapes. In the sessions in the following weeks, semi-permanent needles were replaced with new ones. Shen men (TF4), Sympathetic (AH6a), Lung, Liver (CO12) Kidney point (CO10) were applied to five specific points in the ear in accordance with the NADA protocol.
Treatment:
Other: Auricular acupuncture
Seed
Experimental group
Description:
Five sessions of unilateral auricular acupuncture were applied alternately to the right and left ears, once a week, to the intensive care nurses in the seed group. Seeds placed on the acupuncture points of the nurses' ears remained for one week with adhesive tapes. In the sessions in the following weeks, seeds were replaced with new ones. The seed group was asked to apply pressure on the bands three times a day, 15 times each time. Shen men (TF4), Sympathetic (AH6a), Lung, Liver (CO12) Kidney point (CO10) were applied to five specific points in the ear in accordance with the NADA protocol.
Treatment:
Other: Auricular acupuncture
Control
No Intervention group
Description:
This group received no intervention.

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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