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The Effect of Mandala Coloring Applied to Caregivers Caring for Palliative Care Patients on Perceived Stress, Anxiety Level, and Quality of Life

A

Ataturk University

Status

Completed

Conditions

Anxiety Level
Quality of Life
Perceived Stress

Treatments

Behavioral: Perceived Stress, Mandala application

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT05847231
2023/ 05- 08

Details and patient eligibility

About

The word palliative comes from the Latin word "pallium" meaning "cover". The aim of palliative care is not to eliminate the cause of the disease; to alleviate the negative effects of the disease.

Mandala painting, which is one of the non-pharmacological applications, is an art therapy technique that can provide psychological support and healing. Mandala painting is a safe and accessible activity that requires no special skills and can be used as a complementary strategy to support mental health. In the literature, it is stated that coloring mandala improves psychological symptoms and relieves the person. The artistic view of nursing is to understand the needs of the individual, the sources of anxiety, anxiety and stress, and then to develop practices that will increase his/her self-confidence and resilience by increasing his/her ability and competence level. Therefore, this study was planned to examine the effect of mandala painting applied to caregivers caring for palliative care patients on perceived stress, anxiety level and quality of life.

This research, which is planned as a randomized experimental study with pretest-posttest control group, will be a study for informal caregivers who have patients in the palliative service of fethi sekin city hospital between May 2023 and December 2023. The sample will consist of 80 (40 experimental, 40 control) caregivers who accepted the research that met the research criteria.

Experimental group will be composed of caregivers who will paint mandalas. In addition to verbal and written information, the Patient Description Form, Perceived Stress Scale (PSÖ), State-Trait Anxiety Scale (WHO) and Short Form (SF-36) Quality of Life Scale have been applied to the 1st Stage. measurement will be obtained. The program will be implemented for 4 weeks, 4 days a week. 16 pre-selected mandala drawings will be printed separately on A4 papers and a new drawing will be given to caregivers every week. Mandala coloring papers and 12 colored felt-tip crayons will be given to each participant by the researcher. After the end of the sessions, the second measurements will be obtained by applying the Perceived Stress Scale (PSS), State-Trait Anxiety Scale (DSQ) and Short Form-36 (SF-36) Quality of Life Scale.

Full description

The palliative care approach first emerged in the 11th century as a religious-based volunteer movement for the treatment of people suffering from terminal illnesses during long journeys. Although the quality of patient care changes all over the world, there is definitely a section in care that includes the responsibilities of the family. It is stated in the literature that the anxiety levels of the patient and family members who receive the necessary information and support about the disease decrease. The caregiving process is a very stressful situation for the caregiver, which can lead to physical and psychological problems. Anxiety levels of caregivers also increase due to the caregiving process that creates excessive stress and anxiety. Studies in which caregivers have high levels of anxiety due to the burden of care come to the fore in the literature. Mandala provides calming and relaxation as your mind. It silences the negative and complex emotions that bother the person himself. With the relaxation it provides, it allows the individual to listen to himself and to rest spiritually. Mandala allows to see holistically. While increasing one's awareness, it reveals what is hidden in the unconscious. Art therapy helps individuals feel themselves at the center of their lives, express themselves and discover who they are in the group while drawing, painting or making mandalas.

Jung stated that he created mandalas in times of distress when both he and his patients felt negative emotions. İn the previous studies; Mandala art therapy has been used to define psychiatric problems in children, to reduce stress and to calm down, to provide concentration and psychological relaxation, and positive results have been obtained.

Enrollment

80 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18 to 75 years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • be over 18 years old
  • Palliative care patient being the only informal caregiver
  • There is no physical problem that will prevent painting mandala. (seeing, hearing, etc.)
  • Being able to use their hands actively
  • No communication problem
  • No learning problems
  • Being suitable/willing to work with the group

Exclusion criteria

  • be under the age of 18
  • Palliative care patient is not the only informal caregiver
  • Having a physical problem that will prevent you from painting a mandala (sight, hearing, etc.)
  • Having a physical disability in the upper extremity of the caregiver
  • Having trouble communicating
  • Having a learning problem
  • It does not show the harmony of working with the group.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Supportive Care

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Sequential Assignment

Masking

Single Blind

80 participants in 2 patient groups

mandala app
Experimental group
Description:
mandala will be aplicated
Treatment:
Behavioral: Perceived Stress, Mandala application
routine maintenance practice
No Intervention group
Description:
Routine maintenance will be applied.

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Gülcan B.TURAN, PHD; Fatma GÜRCAN, STD

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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