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Reiki and Qi-gong Therapy to Improve Negative Emotional States of Anxiety, Depression, and Stress in Type-2 Diabetics

B

Beni-Suef University

Status

Enrolling

Conditions

Type-2 Diabetic Patients

Treatments

Behavioral: Reiki Therapy
Behavioral: Qi-gong Therapy

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT05704465
NSBS09012023

Details and patient eligibility

About

Diabetes is a worldwide chronic disease due to a disorder in the metabolism of blood glucose. It has high prevalence rates especially in developing countries and is associated with 1.5 million deaths per year. It showed increasing trends over the last few decades. This study aims to To evaluate and compare the effectiveness of Reiki and Qi-gong therapy techniques in improving diabetic patients' negative emotional states. This open-label randomized controlled trial. The study was conducted at the National Institute of Diabetes and Endocrinology's Hospital.

The study sampling population consisted of all patients suffering from Type 2 diabetes attending the setting during the time of the study. randomized into two equal groups: one group will receive reiki intervention, and a second group will receive the qi-gong intervention.

The researcher will use a self-administered questionnaire with a standardized tool (Depression Anxiety Stress Scales [DASS]) for assessment of depression, anxiety, and stress, along with a section for patients' demographic and health characteristics such as age, gender, marital status, duration of diabetes, treatment modalities, body mass index, and glycemic control.

Full description

Rationale & background information:

Diabetes is a worldwide chronic disease due to a disorder in the metabolism of blood glucose. It has high prevalence rates especially in developing countries and is associated with 1.5 million deaths per year. It showed increasing trends over the last few decades. Egypt has high prevalence rates of diabetes reaching 20.9% among 20-79 years old, and it ranks tenth highest country in the global ranking of age-adjusted DM prevalence.

Type-1 diabetes mellitus (T1DM) is attributed autoimmune destruction of the β-cells of the pancreas which are responsible for insulin secretion. Meanwhile, in Type-2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM), which is the more prevalent, patients suffer from insulin resistance. These two types are widely different in their etiology, epidemiology, complications, and prognosis although some cases may pose some ambiguity in diagnosis.

Diabetic patients may on the long-term suffer low quality of life due to its physical and psychological complications attributed to macro- and micro-vascular changes leading to renal, retinal, peripheral vascular, cardiovascular, and neurological diseases. Moreover, their risk of death diabetic patients is 1.5 times higher than the general population. Yet, the advances in the treatment modalities of diabetes with the new technologies led to improvements in the life expectancy and prevention of complications among these patients.

In addition to the physical complications associated with Type-2 DM, these patients are at high risk of suffering a wide spectrum of psychological disorders. Thus, diabetic patients are more likely to have negative emotions such as anxiety, depression, and stress. Research has demonstrated high prevalence rates of these psychological problems among diabetic patients. The association between these negative emotion symptoms and diabetes and its trajectory seem to be complicated and bidirectional. For instance, stress and anxiety can increase the risk of developing Type-2 DM through its deregulatory effect on the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis, thus initiating resistance to insulin. Moreover, depression among was shown to increase the risk of diabetic retinopathy among diabetic patients.

The management of Type-2 DM has greatly evolved during the last few decades, with technological advances reflected on its treatment modalities including self-monitoring, precise insulin titration, and insulin pump, and smart insulin pens. Added to these are the advances in pharmacotherapy, telehealth, and mobile applications.

Complementary and alternative medicine have also added to the effectiveness of treatments of Type-2 DM, and research demonstrated better patient outcomes in multi-approaches compared to mono-approaches in its management. Reflexology, which is based on application of pressure on hands and feet is one of these approaches. Reiki is a biofield therapy technique based on energy healing, developed by the Japanese Mikao Usui of Kyoto in the 19's. In this technique, energy is guided by therapist's hands placed near patient's body to activate the ability of the body to heal and restore its balance. It demonstrated successes in management of fatigue in breast cancer patients on chemotherapy, sleep disorders, hypertension and alcohol consumption, children on palliative care, and cerebral palsy.

Meanwhile, Qigong technique is a type of mind-body meditative exercise developed in traditional Chinese medicine more than 5000 years ago. It involves coordination of breathing and physical movement with mental energy to promote cognitive performance. It showed effectiveness in the management of patients with knee osteoarthritis, atrial fibrillation, pulmonary rehabilitation for COPD, and hypertension.

Significance of the study:

Diabetes mellitus represents a major public health problem in Egypt, with increasing trends. Although recognizing and addressing its related psychological symptoms is of great importance in its management, this still remains suboptimal. Inexpensive complementary medicine approaches like Reiki and Qi-gong therapies could be of help.

Study goals and objectives:

To evaluate and compare the effectiveness of Reiki and Qi-gong therapy techniques in improving diabetic patients' negative emotional states.

Enrollment

200 estimated patients

Sex

All

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

Type 2 diabetes with unchanged antidiabetic therapy Type 2 diabetes with negative emotional state (depression, anxiety, stress)

Exclusion criteria

Patients with severe psychiatric Patients with neurological disability or addiction, Patients who unable to perform the intervention techniques Patients who enrolled in other clinical trials were excluded

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

200 participants in 2 patient groups

Reiki Therapy
Other group
Description:
Reiki is a biofield therapy technique based on energy healing.
Treatment:
Behavioral: Reiki Therapy
Qi-gong Therapy
Other group
Description:
Qigong technique is a type of mind-body meditative exercise developed in traditional Chinese medicine more than 5000 years ago.
Treatment:
Behavioral: Qi-gong Therapy

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Nagwa A. Souilm

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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