Meta-analysis of the interventional effects of music therapy on pain and anxiety of burn patients in wound dressing change.
10.3760/cma.j.cn501120-20210716-00252
- Author:
Ye LI
1
;
Fang Li LIU
1
;
Ju YUAN
2
;
Jing LI
3
;
Zi Wei LIU
1
;
Ningxiao GUAN
1
Author Information
1. School of Nursing and Health, Henan University, Kaifeng 475000, China.
2. Department of Endocrinology, Henan Provincial People's Hospital, Zhengzhou 450000, China.
3. Department of Gastrointestinal Surgery, Henan Provincial People's Hospital, Zhengzhou 450000, China.
- Publication Type:Journal Article
- MeSH:
Humans;
Music Therapy/methods*;
Pain/etiology*;
Anxiety/therapy*;
Burns/therapy*;
Bandages
- From:
Chinese Journal of Burns
2022;38(11):1079-1084
- CountryChina
- Language:Chinese
-
Abstract:
Objective: To evaluate the interventional effects of music therapy on pain and anxiety of burn patients in wound dressing change. Methods: The meta-analysis method was adopted. Databases including China National Knowledge Internet, Wanfang Database, and VIP database were retrieved with the search terms in Chinese version of ", , /, /", and PubMed, Embase, and Cochrane Library were retrieved with the search terms in English version of "music, burn, dressing change/wound dressing, pain/ache/sore" to obtain the publicly published randomized controlled trials on the application of music therapy for wound dressing change in burn patients from the establishment of each database to May 2021. The outcome indexes included pain score/percentage and anxiety score after dressing change. Rev Man 5.4 and Stata 14.0 statistical software were used to conduct a meta-analysis of eligible studies. Results: A total of 520 burn patients from 7 studies were included, including 260 patients in music therapy group who received music therapy and 260 patients in routine dressing change group who received routine dressing change. The bias risk of all the 7 included studies was uncertain. Compared with those in routine dressing change group, the pain percentages (relative risk=0.06, 95% confidence interval=0.01-0.41, P<0.01) and pain scores after dressing change (standardized mean difference (SMD)=-0.91, 95% confidence interval=-1.61--0.22, P<0.05) of patients in music therapy group were significantly lower. Subgroup analysis showed that music type and timing of intervention might be the source of heterogeneity in pain scores after dressing change. The anxiety scores of patients in music therapy group were significantly lower than those in routine dressing change group (SMD=-0.64, 95% confidence interval=-1.09--0.19, P<0.01). There was no publication bias in pain or anxiety scores after dressing change. Conclusions: Music therapy can relieve the pain and anxiety of burn patients during dressing change.