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Teaching Caregivers of Hospice Patients to Administer Reiki

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The Ohio State University

Status

Withdrawn

Conditions

Hospice
Anxiety
Pain
Stress

Treatments

Other: Reiki therapy

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT04086017
2019B0544

Details and patient eligibility

About

Being a family caregiver for a patient at the end of life is both rewarding and stressful. When the end of life is nearing, caregivers may be unsure of how to help their family member. Reiki, a light touch energy therapy has been shown to increase relaxation and improve sleep quality, and decrease pain, anxiety, depressive symptoms, and medication use in both hospitalized and community-dwelling adults. This feasibility study is designed to evaluate whether teaching caregivers is feasible in addition to evaluating any benefit to FCGs and patients.

Full description

The time a patient and family caregiver (FCG) spend together in a patient's final days is filled with emotion. Patients may turn inward and be filled with peace, or they may be bothered by symptoms. Caregivers often experience feelings of helplessness and anticipatory grief. Learning and providing a skill such as Reiki may give caregivers a way to help the patient with symptoms while at the same time feeling useful. Patient and caregiver closeness may be enhanced. Reiki has been shown to be helpful with symptoms such as pain, anxiety, depression, fatigue, and others. However, teaching caregivers of terminal hospice patients, Reiki has not been studied. The knowledge gained from this feasibility study will guide future interventions aimed at the comfort of hospice patients and FCGs.

Approximately 1.49 million Medicare beneficiaries received hospice care during 2017, and most had a FCG. During the final days or weeks, FCGs are unsure of what do or how to best help the patient when everyday caregiving actives such as physical care or nutrition are not required or no longer desired by the patient. Caregiver symptoms of depression, anxiety, or anticipatory grief increase toward the end of life along with increased patient symptoms. Having a specific skill to help the patient with symptoms or simply to show care and provide touch may empower FCGs and improve the quality of life for both caregivers and patients.

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

Patients will be eligible for the study if they are

  • ≥ 18 years old
  • receiving hospice at home.

Caregivers will be eligible if they are

  • ≥ 18 years old,
  • willing to complete measures, and if they are randomized to the Reiki group
  • willing to learn Reiki therapy, provide at least two Reiki therapy sessions with the patient of at least 10 minutes twice per day with at least two hours between sessions and complete one 10-minute self-Reiki session per day. Two caregivers may participate in the study.

Exclusion criteria

Patients will be excluded if:

  • they have a diagnosis of atrial fibrillation
  • they have an active pacemaker, or
  • death is expected in less than two weeks.

Caregivers will be excluded if they

  • cannot understand or speak English
  • have severe, uncorrected hearing loss
  • have self-reported uncontrolled atrial fibrillation
  • have a self-reported diagnosis of dementia
  • have a self-reported psychiatric disorder (bipolar disorder, schizophrenia)
  • are unwilling or unable to complete measures (both groups) or perform Reiki and self-Reiki (intervention cohort).

Trial design

Primary purpose

Supportive Care

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

0 participants in 2 patient groups

Reiki teaching
Experimental group
Description:
Reiki Master will perform the teaching and attunement process for Level 1 Reiki and teach the caregiver(s) how to complete a simple 10-minute Reiki session with the patient and a 10-minute self-Reiki session for the caregiver(s). The Reiki Master will explain that Reiki sessions can be given whenever the patient and caregiver feel it is appropriate, but sessions should be at minimum twice per 24-hour period for at least 10 minutes with at least two hours between sessions. Reiki sessions may be more frequent than twice per day and/or longer than 10 minutes. Self-Reiki sessions should be performed daily for at least 10 minutes but maybe more frequent and/or longer in length. Each family caregiver will receive a copy of the book. The patient and caregiver will wear a Holter monitor continuously for 48 hours beginning when the caregiver(s) are trained in Reiki to measure HRV, a valid measure for stress.
Treatment:
Other: Reiki therapy
Usual care
No Intervention group
Description:
Patients and caregivers will complete all measures expected of the intervention cohort including daily symptom checklist for 10 days. The patient and caregiver will wear a Holter monitor for the first 48 hours of study participation to measure heart rate variability (HRV), a valid measure for stress. The patient and/or caregiver may opt out of the Holter monitor if requested and still participate in the rest of the study.

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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