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The goal of this clinical trial is to examine the effect of hot water foot bath on the patients' pain severity and sleep quality levels on the night of the lumbar degenerative disc surgery. The main hypotheses are:
Participants will be asked to keep their feet in 42oC hot water for 20 minutes on the night of the day of surgery.
If there is a comparison group: Researchers will compare control group to see if there is any difference on the pain severity and sleep quality of the patients.
Full description
Group allocation of the patients was done through using Random Allocation Software program and patients were allocated into two groups: the intervention group and the control group.
Patients in the intervention group were asked to take a footbath in 42oC water for 20-minutes in the evening of the surgery day.
The nurse researcher visited the patients in the morning of the surgery day in their service room, asked to rate their current pain severity score between 0 - 10 points, and asked to rate the sleep quality scale items between 0 - 100 points according to their previous night sleep. The patients in the intervention group were informed that they were going to be visited to perform the footbath in the evening before they go asleep, and the patients in the control group were informed that they were going to be visited in the next morning.
In the evening of the surgery day, the nurse researcher visited the patients in their service room and explained footbath procedure to the patients, following, filled the foot tub with hot water to approximately 20 cm above the patients' ankle and measured the temperature of the water with using a water thermometer. When the temperature was stable at 42oC, the patients were asked to sit in semi-fowler position in the bed and to immerse their feet in the foot tub without washing or any massage for 20-minutes. During the footbath, the upper side of the foot tub was covered with a towel to prevent temperature loss by vaporizing and the researcher stayed in the room to observe the patient according to any unwanted events such as sweating, having pain, feeling hot or bad etc. At the end of the footbath procedure, feet of the patients were dried with a towel and checked for any redness. Then, the researcher helped patients to wear their socks to keep the feet warm and measured the final temperature of the water. Finally, the patients were informed that they were going to be visited in the morning.
The standard procedure is pharmacological pain management following the surgery as explained under the study setting title to decrease the pain severity, consequently, to improve the sleep quality, and this standard procedure was used for each group. Footbath was not applied to the patients in the control group.
Patients in both study groups were visited by the nurse researcher in the morning of the postoperative day in their service room, asked to rate their current pain severity score between 0 - 10 points, and asked to rate the sleep quality scale items between 0 - 100 points according to their previous night sleep.
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60 participants in 2 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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